Yeah, I did exactly the same thing at Stoga and it made me want to rip my hair out. My best advice is to just 100% impale the things and get as many connections going as you can. If you're limited to only getting a certain number of styrofoam balls/toothpicks (like I was at Stoga) you need to be careful about how you impale the things, making sure you leave enough room to attach the other stuff to it. If you're not, I'd say to just go to town until you put together a working model.Does anyone have any experience/advice about making cubic crystal models? We had to do something like this at our regional where we were given toothpicks, styrofoam balls, and beads to make a model of an FCC crystal, and that was a frustrating experience.
Approximately how many of each were you given? I could see this being a good lab, but if materials were limited, that wouldn't really be in the spirit of the event.Yeah, I did exactly the same thing at Stoga and it made me want to rip my hair out. My best advice is to just 100% impale the things and get as many connections going as you can. If you're limited to only getting a certain number of styrofoam balls/toothpicks (like I was at Stoga) you need to be careful about how you impale the things, making sure you leave enough room to attach the other stuff to it. If you're not, I'd say to just go to town until you put together a working model.Does anyone have any experience/advice about making cubic crystal models? We had to do something like this at our regional where we were given toothpicks, styrofoam balls, and beads to make a model of an FCC crystal, and that was a frustrating experience.
tl;dr models are a crapshoot based on quality and quantity of materials given, from my experience.
I don't recall the numbers from when I did this, but we had an excess of styrofoam balls and not enough beads to make the structure. The toothpicks were also too fat to slide the beads on to, so we basically just made a cube out of styrofoam balls and shoved whatever couple of beads we had on to the very tips of the toothpicks.Approximately how many of each were you given? I could see this being a good lab, but if materials were limited, that wouldn't really be in the spirit of the event.Yeah, I did exactly the same thing at Stoga and it made me want to rip my hair out. My best advice is to just 100% impale the things and get as many connections going as you can. If you're limited to only getting a certain number of styrofoam balls/toothpicks (like I was at Stoga) you need to be careful about how you impale the things, making sure you leave enough room to attach the other stuff to it. If you're not, I'd say to just go to town until you put together a working model.Does anyone have any experience/advice about making cubic crystal models? We had to do something like this at our regional where we were given toothpicks, styrofoam balls, and beads to make a model of an FCC crystal, and that was a frustrating experience.
tl;dr models are a crapshoot based on quality and quantity of materials given, from my experience.
According to this paper (not posting the chart here due to copyright stuff; scroll down to p. 6), both the compressive and Young's moduli are greater for Kevlar. UTS is a bit subjective in this case because the cross-sectional areas of the fibers were different.What does it mean when we say, "kevlar is stronger than spider's silk"? Does it refer to ultimate tensile strength, yield strength, or young's modulus, etc.?
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