If rubberbands are solid then how can they stretch ?

2 Answers
Aug 29, 2015

Rubber stretches because its long chains can straighten out.

Explanation:

Rubber is a natural polymer.

It contains long chains that are cross-linked to each other (at the red spots in the image below.

www.thenakedscientists.com

If you stretch the rubber, the chains do not slip past each other, but they do tend to straighten out.

Stretch
(from www.thenakedscientists.com)

After the force is removed, the cross-links cause the rubber to resume its original size and shape.

Aug 29, 2015

solids can be elastic too

Explanation:

most elastic materials are polymers with lots of crosslinking chemical bonds. When the material is stretched or compressed or twisted, the chemical bonds 'relax; and allow the object to change shape. As long as the force applied isn't too much, the object can return to its original dimensions.

This is defined and quantified by material properties such as Young's Modulus and Poisson's ratio.

further reading:

https://www.tut.fi/ms/muo/vert/5_rubber_chemistry/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisson%27s_ratio