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Question:

At what thickness does aluminium become stronger than paper?

I did a little experiment where paper shapes could hold kilograms of weight, But then I looked next to me and saw a thing that holds a beaker above a Bunsen Burner and that could definitely hold much more weightThen I thought, what would be a metal equivalent of paper, of course foil came to mind.So of course paper could be stronger for a while but at what point would foil be stronger than paper.People use foil to wrap up their food because (one reason) it because it stays crumbled and is designed to crumblePaper unfolds itself so paper is stronger.What point?

Answer:

By most definitions, I think aluminium is always stronger than paper.
i'm guessing for noble gasoline center, it may be for Fluorine: [Fe] 2s^2p^5 (written for larger point chemistry; extra handy to study is: [Fe] 2s^2 2p^5; i could use the 2d) Cs: [Xe] 6s^a million i'm guessing that's what the question refers to whilst it asks for the noble gasoline center?

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