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Chlorine Fluorine Nitrogen Oxygen
They are the only two elements that exist in the liquid state at standard temperature and pressure.
Very few elements exist in their free state in nature. The vast majority of them exist as compounds, chemically bonded to other elements.
Bromine and Mercury at room temperature. All can exist as liquids, but they must be heated or cooled first.
Most elements are sufficiently reactive so it can not exist in elemental form.
Chlorine Fluorine Nitrogen Oxygen
They are the only two elements that exist in the liquid state at standard temperature and pressure.
It depends which elements you are talking about. Some would exist as solids at this temperature while others would be gases or liquids.
Both the elements exist in gaseous states at room temperatures.
solid...
The only metal element to exist in a non-solid state at room temperature is Mercury, which is a liquid between -38.83 °C and 356.73 °C at standard pressure.
solid
Elements can either be synthetic or natural. Synthetic elements are made artificially in laboratories, while natural elements exist in their natural state in nature. Natural elements can further be defined as native elements. These elements exist in their uncombined state.
liquids
Very few elements exist in their free state in nature. The vast majority of them exist as compounds, chemically bonded to other elements.
Bromine, Br2, and mercury, Hg, are the only elements that are liquids at room temperature.
Yes. Bromine and mercury are the only 2 elements that exist as liquids at room temperature (25oC). However, there 4 other elements that exist as liquids at temperatures slighty above room temperature: * Francium at 27oC * Cesium at 28.6oC * Gallium at 30.3oC * Rubidium at 39.5oC