Every substance will turn into a gas if sufficiently heated, so yes, lithium can exist as a gas.
No. Lithium is a solid at room temperature.
Lithium is a metal, so is referred to as a metallic lattice, so molecular formula doesnt apply. gaseous lithium can form Li2 at high temperatures. Fluorine forms F2 gas in its standard molecular state
Solid lithium iodide decomposes into solid lithium and iodine gas.
Argon is an inert gas, and an inert gas does not want to combine with anything else. There is no compound name for a lithium and argon compound because there is no lithium and argon compound.
solid
Lithium is not a gas but solid metal
Not liquid but a gas; lithium condensate is a strange state of matter - a very diluted gas at a temperature near zero absolute. The properties of this phase are explained by the Bose-Einstein theory.
Lithium is a metal, so is referred to as a metallic lattice, so molecular formula doesnt apply. gaseous lithium can form Li2 at high temperatures. Fluorine forms F2 gas in its standard molecular state
No. Lithium is a solid at room temperature.
lithium hydride is a solid at room temperature.
Lithium's state of matter is solid. It can be made into a liquid but its true form is solid.
Lithium in its standard state is a solid metal.
helium is a noble gas. lithium is an alkali metal.
Solid lithium iodide decomposes into solid lithium and iodine gas.
Argon is an inert gas, and an inert gas does not want to combine with anything else. There is no compound name for a lithium and argon compound because there is no lithium and argon compound.
No. Lithium is an alkali metal (or group 1 element).
lithium