At standard room temperature and pressure Fluorine is a yellowish coloured gas. When it is combined with another elements it forms a fluoride and I am pretty sure that they are all solids at room temperature and pressure. Although the properties of individual fluorides will vary.
No it is a salt which is a solid at room temperature.
Sucrose can be both solid or liquid. At room temperature, however, it's a solid.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
The zinc's state at room temperature is solid commercially it is available as chunks.
solid at room temperature.
NaF is a solid at room temp
No it is a salt which is a solid at room temperature.
Like virtually all ionic compounds, magnesium fluoride is a solid at room temperature.
Fluoride does not exist on its own as a substance. It is a negatively charged ion that needs to be accompanied by a positive ion. Substances containing this ion, call fluorides are not liquids, gasses, or metals but solid salts. The element fluorine from which the fluoride ion is formed from is a gas.
The element, Selenium, is a solid at room temperature.
At room temperature and standard pressure the element Boron is a solid.
Sucrose can be both solid or liquid. At room temperature, however, it's a solid.
It is a solid at room temperature. It is in the d block.
Vanadium is a solid metal at room temperature.
Yes, carbon is a solid at room temperature.. Elemental carbon is a solid at room temperature
Gold is a solid at Room temperature and pressure.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.