No. Carbon is a solid at room temperature and will sublimate (go from solid straight to gas i.e. no liquid) at 3900 Kelvin.
Carbon is a solid at room temperature.
Carbon is a solid liquid instead of a gas at room temperature.
It is a liquid because at room temperature the molecular structure of the substance wants to expand. When the substance expands it goes from being a solid to a liquid. This expansion takes place when the room is at the commonly know "room temperature"
At room temperature: Oxygen & Nitrogen are gases, Carbon is solid, & Mercury is a liquid.
There are several allotropes of carbon, all of which are solid at room temperature.
Mercury is not an example of a gas at room temperature. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature.
it is a solid at room temperature
Water exhibits hydrogen bonding
This varies depending upon which nonmetal you are asking about. Chlorine is a gas at room temperature, but bromine is a liquid and carbon is a solid.
It is a solid at room temperature! hope that helped xxx
A type of lipid. I don't know what it is called though.
CS2 is a liquid at room temperature due to its molecular structure and intermolecular forces. The linear structure of the CS2 molecule allows for strong van der Waals forces between molecules, keeping them close together and in a liquid state at room temperature. Additionally, the presence of polar covalent bonds in the CS2 molecule contributes to its liquid state.