There are several allotropes of carbon, all of which are solid at room temperature.
Carbon is a solid at room temperature.
Carbon can exist as a solid, liquid, or gas, depending on its form. Graphite and diamond are solid forms of carbon, while carbon dioxide is a gas, and liquid carbon can exist in supercritical conditions.
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 liquid instead of a gas at room temperature.
It is a solid at room temperature! hope that helped xxx
Carbon is a solid at room temperature.
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.
carbon is a solid
At room temperature: Oxygen & Nitrogen are gases, Carbon is solid, & Mercury is a liquid.
Carbon is a solid most of the time, but can be made into a liquid, gas, or plasma.
No, carbon dioxide can exist in all three states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) depending on temperature and pressure. At room temperature and pressure, carbon dioxide exists as a gas, but it can be converted into a solid (dry ice) or a liquid under different conditions.
Carbon can exist in various forms including solid (graphite, diamond), liquid (molten carbon under extreme conditions), and gas (carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide).