nonbrittle
Nonbrittle describes materials that resist brittle fracture and instead deform significantly before failure or absorb a large amount of energy during fracture. It is a descriptive term rather than a formal category, and a nonbrittle material may be ductile or tough depending on context such as temperature, loading rate, and microstructure.
The behavior is strongly influenced by temperature and strain rate. Many metals exhibit a ductile-to-brittle transition,
Mechanistically, nonbrittle fracture involves mechanisms that accommodate plastic deformation or energy absorption, such as dislocation motion,
Testing and metrics used to assess nonbrittleness include toughness and fracture energy, as well as the critical
Examples and caveats: room-temperature steels and many aluminum alloys commonly display nonbrittle behavior, with substantial plastic