Composite Building Materials
Composite building materials are formed from two or more distinctly vary materials. When amass, the properties of the newly formed material are sophisticated to those of the individual components. The process of combining is a mammal practice rather than a chemical one, for that defense the composite materials feature the collective properties of their ingredient materials. Composite materials contain two types of constituent materials, matrix and reinforcement materials. At least one variety of each type is indispensable. The matrix material surrounds and supports late accrual constituents by keeping their relative positions. The reinforcement material imparts special beast properties, such as electrical and mechanical, to incorporation the matrix properties. Composite materials are noted for characteristic properties such as high structural strength, lightweight, resistance to chemical wear and corrosion, toughness (impact strength), mechanical stiffness, heat resistance and eas...