No. Oxygen is gaseous at room temperature.
im pretty sure that oxygen is a poor conducter of electricty because it is a gas and a nonmetal and i think it is a brittle solid at room temperature but im not sure.....hope i helped :)
Iodine is likely to be a poor conductor of electricity and a brittle solid at room temperature. It is a non-metal with properties that make it a poor conductor of electricity and a brittle solid.
Brittle solid
Oxygen is a gas at room temperature and pressure, so it does not have a structure that can exhibit brittleness like solid materials. Brittle materials typically fracture when subjected to stress, but as a gas, oxygen does not have a fixed structure to break in this way.
Potassium iodide is a brittle crystalline solid at room temperature.
The zinc's state at room temperature is solid commercially it is available as chunks.
Iodine would likely be a poor conductor of electricity and a brittle solid at room temperature. Oxygen and zinc are more metallic in nature, which generally means they are better conductors of electricity and have more malleable properties compared to nonmetals like iodine.
Chlorine itself is not a solid material, it is a gas at room temperature. It is not considered to have a brittle property since it does not have a defined solid structure.
No, iodine is a dark purple, shiny solid at room temperature. It has a characteristic metallic luster and can sublimate directly from a solid to a gaseous state.
No, iodine is a brittle solid at room temperature and does not exhibit ductility.
The element, Selenium, is a solid at room temperature.
At room temperature, tellurium is a solid. It is a brittle, silvery-white metalloid element that belongs to the group of nonmetals on the periodic table.