Very high. For example, sodium (Na) has a boiling point of 883 degrees C, and iron has a boiling point of 2750.0 degrees C, and gold has a boiling point of 2600 degrees C. You can probably find a Period Table that includes the boiling points of all the elements and much more information.
The boiling point of metalloids is not so high.
false they tend to have low boiling points
Chromium is a metal and metals tend to have high boiling points.
The structure of a compound will dictate what intermolecular forces hold the molecules together. The stronger these forces, the higher will be the boiling point.
Electrovalent compounds have high melting and boiling points as they are held by very strong electrostatic force of attraction making the compound stable and therefore they require a lot of energy to break.
The boiling point of metalloids is not so high.
false they tend to have low boiling points
1.Brittleness 2.High Melting Points 3.High Boiling Points
The boiling points of ionic solids tend to be very high.
Chromium is a metal and metals tend to have high boiling points.
Chromium has a high boiling point as opposed to nonmetals. Metals tend to have high boiling points.
metals
It depends on the type of structure; simple covalent structures (like water) generally have low boiling points, while giant covalent structures (like diamond) have high boiling points.
The process of separation is called distillation.
No mercury compound has a boiling point as high as this.
Boiling point decrease at high altitude.
As a generalization, yes.