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At normal conditions of temperature and pressure chlorine is a gas.
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Chlorine is not a solid, those tablets you get for your pool are not elemental chlorine. They are often hypochlorites (bleaches), but can be many different chemicals that allow introduction of chlorine into the pool water. You can liquefy chlorine at about -30C (not much colder than your freezer), and freeze it at about -100C. But if you happened to have found a bucket full of chlorine sitting around, it'd be a gas.
Depending on the temperature and pressure chlorine can be any one of them
Under normal conditions room temperature and pressure it is a yellow - green gas. It is toxic and used as a poison gas on the battlefields of the first World War in Europe.
At room temperature chlorine is a gas, not a solid.
Chlorine is a solid below -100 degrees Celsius, and a liquid between this temperature and -34 degrees Celsius.
It can come in a powder form but must be mixed with liquid (primarily water) to be used for most purposes
It is a gas.
gas
the only known solid-liquid or "soquid" on the planet today is Wendy's Frosty. Therefore, chlorine can only be a solid at room temperature
The boiling point of chlorine is -34,04 oC.The melting point of chlorine is - 101,5 oC.
gas
Chlorine gas is liquefied by cooling and pressurizing it.
Chlorine is a gas at room temperature.
gas
chlorine can only change from a liquid to a gas-which is by the process of evapouration. it cannot be a soild
No, bleach is a liquid
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.
the only known solid-liquid or "soquid" on the planet today is Wendy's Frosty. Therefore, chlorine can only be a solid at room temperature
Most are solid. Those that are liquid are bromine, and mercury. Those that are gas are nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, and all the noble gases.
Solid
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
solid
evaporation solid to liquid - melting liquid to gas - evaporation gas to liquid - condensation liquid to solid - freezing solid to gas and gas to solid - sublimation
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the gas escaping from this solid-liquid reaction.