The document discusses conductors and non-conductors of electricity. It lists common materials that are conductors, such as metals like silver, copper, and aluminum, as well as graphite, dirty water, and concrete. Materials listed as non-conductors include glass, rubber, oil, asphalt, fiberglass, porcelain, ceramic, quartz, dry paper, wood, plastic, air, diamond, and pure water.
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Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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The document discusses conductors and non-conductors of electricity. It lists common materials that are conductors, such as metals like silver, copper, and aluminum, as well as graphite, dirty water, and concrete. Materials listed as non-conductors include glass, rubber, oil, asphalt, fiberglass, porcelain, ceramic, quartz, dry paper, wood, plastic, air, diamond, and pure water.
The document discusses conductors and non-conductors of electricity. It lists common materials that are conductors, such as metals like silver, copper, and aluminum, as well as graphite, dirty water, and concrete. Materials listed as non-conductors include glass, rubber, oil, asphalt, fiberglass, porcelain, ceramic, quartz, dry paper, wood, plastic, air, diamond, and pure water.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The document discusses conductors and non-conductors of electricity. It lists common materials that are conductors, such as metals like silver, copper, and aluminum, as well as graphite, dirty water, and concrete. Materials listed as non-conductors include glass, rubber, oil, asphalt, fiberglass, porcelain, ceramic, quartz, dry paper, wood, plastic, air, diamond, and pure water.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd