An alloy of 4.2% sodium, 22.2% potassium and 73.6% caesium freezes at -78 deg C. For comparison pure Mercury freezes at -39 deg C and Galinstan (an alloy of gallium, indium and tin) freezes at -19 deg C.
It depends on what you are alloying with. The melting temperature drops significantly by addition of lead, tinn or indium down to the range of 150 °C. Mixing all together at a propriate ratio leads to a quarternery eutectic with Mp= 58°C. By addition of cadmium and mercury it even drops to near 40 °C.
Melting point 271.3°C; boiling point 1,560°C
The boiling point of Bismuth is 2847 degrees Fahrenheit. The boiling point is 1564 in Celsius. The chemical symbol is B and it's atomic number is 83.
70/30 (70% tin, 30% lead) the more lead in an alloy the higher the melting point is.
iy's low melting point is useful in atomatic sprinkler systems
Helium
The melting point of magnesium is 650 degrees celcius. It has the lowest melting point among all the group II metals (alkaline earth metals), though the melting points generally decrease down the group - magnesium is an exception and has the lowest melting point among them.
Tungsten is the metal with the highest melting point at 3695 K, 3422 °C, 6192 °F and Mercury has the lowest metal melting point with 234.32 K, -38.83 °C, -37.89 °F.
70/30 (70% tin, 30% lead) the more lead in an alloy the higher the melting point is.
It is a compound. All pure elements have a certain exact melting point.
The lowest melting point is of course - 39 0C.
Helium with a melting point of -272.905
Bismuth
iy's low melting point is useful in atomatic sprinkler systems
The melting point of steEl is about 1370­°C, or 2500°F, depending on the alloy.
This depends on the chemical composition of the alloy.
Helium
The melting point of magnesium is 650 degrees celcius. It has the lowest melting point among all the group II metals (alkaline earth metals), though the melting points generally decrease down the group - magnesium is an exception and has the lowest melting point among them.
W on the periodic table. the element with the highest melting/boiling point is tungsten.
Melting point of Gold = 1064.18 °C Melting point of Silver = 961.78 °C Melting point of Copper = 1084.62 °C Of cause an alloy of all three would probably have a eutectic melting behavour