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bulksterkte

Bulksterkte, often translated as bulk strength, is a term used in materials science and related fields to describe the resistance of a material when loaded in its bulk form. It refers to how much stress the entire mass can withstand before deforming or failing, as opposed to properties measured on single fibers, grains, or thin films. In practice, bulk strength can encompass various related measures, including compressive strength, yield strength under bulk loading, and the overall integrity of a bulk specimen such as a packed powder, soil, or ceramic body.

Measurement and interpretation of bulk strength typically involve compression testing on bulk samples. Uniaxial compression tests

Applications of bulk strength assessment appear in geotechnical engineering, pharmaceutical manufacturing (tablet and pellet formation), ceramic

Note that the term bulksterkte can be used differently across disciplines, and it may be closely related

on
compacted
powders,
soils,
or
solid
masses
yield
a
maximum
stress
at
failure,
which
is
reported
as
compressive
strength.
For
soils,
bulk
strength
is
often
connected
to
soil
mechanics
concepts
like
cohesion
and
friction
under
confined
or
semi-confined
conditions.
Factors
such
as
density,
porosity,
moisture
content,
particle
size
distribution,
bonding
between
particles,
and
history
of
processing
or
loading
strongly
influence
bulk
strength.
and
powder
metallurgy
processing,
and
bulk
material
handling.
Understanding
bulk
strength
helps
in
predicting
stability,
transport,
compaction
behavior,
and
structural
performance
of
bulk
solids
under
real-world
loading
conditions.
to,
but
distinct
from,
bulk
modulus
or
localized
mechanical
properties.
See
also
compressive
strength,
bulk
modulus,
soil
mechanics,
and
powder
compaction.