Difference between Isotropic & Anisotropic Materials

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This video shows the difference between isotropic material and anisotropic materials.
Isotropic materials are those materials which donot changes their properties with direction, they have same or identical properties in every direction For example metal and glass are isotropic materials which have same properties in every direction, Their strength, modulus of elasticity, hardness etc remains same in every direction.
Anisotropic materials are those materials which changes properties with direction for example Wood, it changes properties with direction.

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#isotropic #Anisotropic
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Thank you. I'm not even an engineer and I understood that perfectly - came here because the online dictionary wasn't clear.

PrincessCarrieGraham
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wow, just saw this in presentation and came here to check it out. Thank you for keeping the explanation simple and straight to the point. 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

MegaPruddy
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100th comment
this helped me in class 12 chemistry chapter 1
thank you so much

GAMINGFORLYF
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Sir you said metal is istropic . But metal is considered to be crystalline solids and we know crystalline solids are anisotropic excrept cubic materials.

letsvlog
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Thank you for helping in my first chapter

piyushsingh
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Sir, crystallines are anisotropic ... but you wrote wood as an example of anisotropic material. How is that possible? ...

vijaykrishnansatheesh
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Anisotropic stones in the Bible
Reveletions 21:19 The foundations of the city walls were decorated with every kind of precious stone. The first foundation was jasper,  the second sapphire, the third agate, the fourth emerald,  20 the fifth onyx, the sixth ruby,  the seventh chrysolite, the eighth beryl, the ninth topaz, the tenth turquoise, the eleventh jacinth, and the twelfth amethyst.

How could they know the difference between anisotropic and Isotropic stones thousands of years ago?

andyshinskate
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That’s well explained, but I heard something about a star being isotropic, or perhaps anisotropic. Does this all relate to stars too?

EvanFromJersey
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Hi, I assume concrete is isotropic. Please correct me if I’m wrong. Appreciate the feedback.

srikirubharajathangappan
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Sir, this difference is based on the area of the material or is based on the position of the molecules?

marianaramalho
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Nice! Thanks, great video! Good you do this in English, there are way to many videos that have english title, description and even start speaing english and thenchange to some strange language :o good you don't follow this trend

tomaszcomasz_
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Thanks for clear me the difference between isotropic and anisotropic

aamirayushrahane
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why the properties of polycrystalline materials are often isotropic?

burhanhialy
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Sir, i have one question. Dose the properties(anisotropic) of material changes even if the rectanguloid or cubic wood applied load?

Karthik-utvo
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What I want to know is:
If manufacturer of aluminum cups asks for our opinion on the purchase of raw material, what anisotropy would we suggest in average?
Average anisotropy 1.2 or average anisotropy 1.4 ? Both given by the supplier.

loveurhits
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This video was perfect. I understood well.Thanks for uploading

balireddybharathi
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I have a question. negative dielectric anisotropy is 'parallel' to electric field direction?

정재원감히전설
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Thanks. What is the practical significance of these concepts

TTLDP
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good !! i wonder Does cylindrical iron have the same directionality?

Grope_short
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thanks, it was a very good explanation

marcoish