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The phrase 'thin slab' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to refer to an object or material that is thinly spread or very thin. For example, "The thin slab of wood easily snapped in two."
Exact(41)
The Q is an eye-catching, extremely thin slab.
A thin slab of tuna is fried on one side and served cooked side down.
The final act was a splendid assortment of Irish cheeses beautifully presented in large pieces on a thin slab of stone.
You have to butterfly the steak — that is, slice it horizontally, almost in two, to open it like a book to make a very thin slab of meat.
A thin slab of gelatinous pork terrine, as beautifully translucent as stained glass, was served with a bright salad of crunchy celery, currants, and parsley; oysters, splashed with cream and prosecco, were flash-baked to an almost glittery sheen.
After a failed attempt with tomtoms, a member of the group fetched a simantra — a long, thin slab of wood that, in Eastern Orthodoxy, is used to summon worshippers.
Similar(17)
One example is a thin-slab caster that casts strands 50 millimetres thick and 1,250 millimetres wide at speeds of about five metres per minute.
Examples include single- or dual-roll strip casters, which cast strip directly from liquid steel, and belt casters for thin-slab production.
Thin-slab cast steel now accounts for 20 million tons of global sheet steel production.
Nucor's thin-slab caster made 5cm-thick slabs that needed far less rolling.
In 1989 Nucor created the world's first thin-slab caster at Crawfordsville (next to the new site).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com