You can conduct electricity through liquid mercury.
Mercury is a liquid metal at room temperature, with a melting point of -38.83°C and a boiling point of 356.73°C. It is known for its silvery appearance, high density, and ability to conduct electricity. Mercury is toxic and should be handled with caution.
only metal elements conduct electricity, and they do it very well
nonmetal
A strong indication of an element's metallic nature is its ability to conduct electricity and heat, while a strong indication of a non-metallic nature is its brittleness, lack of luster, and poor conductivity of electricity.
Bromine only conducts electricity when bonded with another metal/element.
Mercury is a reddish liquid element that does not conduct electricity in its liquid form.
Form an aqueous solution
Bromine, oxygen and sulphur are all non metals, mercury is a metal. Mercury will conduct electricity and heat thou at quite low levels while the others will have negligible conductivity if at all. With metals, conductivity will decrease with an increase in temperature.
Mercury is a liquid metal at room temperature, with a melting point of -38.83°C and a boiling point of 356.73°C. It is known for its silvery appearance, high density, and ability to conduct electricity. Mercury is toxic and should be handled with caution.
No, xenon is a noble gas and does not conduct electricity in its standard state. It is a non-reactive and non-metallic element, making it an insulator.
only metal elements conduct electricity, and they do it very well
nonmetal
a sulphur element has no mobile electrons
A strong indication of an element's metallic nature is its ability to conduct electricity and heat, while a strong indication of a non-metallic nature is its brittleness, lack of luster, and poor conductivity of electricity.
Yes. It is a metal and conducts electricity well. It is used as part of the switch in thermostats, and so forth.
carbon
It is shiny, will conduct electricity.