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  2. Spandex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spandex

    Elastic material used in the fabrics of a summer cycling attire comprising a jersey, bib shorts and gloves. Spandex, Lycra, or elastane is a synthetic fiber known for its exceptional elasticity. It is a polyether-polyurea copolymer that was invented in 1958 by chemist Joseph Shivers at DuPont. [1] [2] [3] Yarn of colourless to white Spandex fibers

  3. Ripstop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripstop

    Ripstop fabric. Ripstop is a woven fabric, often made of nylon, using a reinforcing technique that makes it more resistant to tearing and wear.During weaving, stronger (and often thicker) reinforcement yarns are interwoven at regular intervals in a crosshatch pattern.

  4. Stretch fabric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretch_fabric

    A lycra jacket. Stretch fabric is a synthetic fabric that stretches. Stretch fabrics are either 2-way stretch or 4-way stretch. 2-way stretch fabrics stretch in one direction, usually from selvedge to selvedge (but can be in other directions depending on the knit). 4-way stretch fabrics, such as spandex, stretches in both directions, crosswise and lengthwise. [1]

  5. Hyperelastic material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperelastic_material

    The hyperelastic material is a special case of a Cauchy elastic material. For many materials, linear elastic models do not accurately describe the observed material behaviour. The most common example of this kind of material is rubber, whose stress-strain relationship can be defined as non-linearly elastic, isotropic and incompressible.

  6. Elastic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elastic

    "Elastic", a 2018 single by Joey Purp; Elastic, working title of the 2012 Indian film Cocktail; Elastic NV, the company that releases the Elasticsearch search engine Elasticsearch, a search engine based on Apache Lucene; Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), a web service that provides secure, resizable compute capacity in a cloud format

  7. Superhard material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superhard_material

    If a material contains many delocalized bonds it is likely to be soft. [10] Somewhat related to hardness is another mechanical property fracture toughness, which is a material's ability to resist breakage from forceful impact (note that this concept is distinct from the notion of toughness). A superhard material is not necessarily "supertough".

  8. Sorbothane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorbothane

    Sorbothane is a visco-elastic material, meaning that it exhibits properties of both liquids (viscous solutions) and solids (elastic materials), with a relaxation time of two seconds. [4] Because visco-elastic behavior is desirable in shock and vibration applications, many materials claim to be viscoelastic; however, many of these materials have ...

  9. Elastic energy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elastic_energy

    The elastic potential energy per unit volume is given by: = = where = is the strain in the material. In the general case, elastic energy is given by the free energy per unit of volume f as a function of the strain tensor components ε ij = + where λ and μ are the Lamé elastic coefficients and we use Einstein summation convention.

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