Want this question answered?
No. The element C (carbon) is a nonmetal, not a metal. It does have the highest melting point of all the elements, though.
human bones have the highest melting and boiling point we can see this in funerels where bones get burnt at last
Solids made of atoms
These are some metals and salts.
Several characteristic properties include melting and boiling points, density, and reactivity.
No. The element C (carbon) is a nonmetal, not a metal. It does have the highest melting point of all the elements, though.
Yes, elements have fixed melting points; but some exceptions are with the elements having allotropes (as carbon, sulfur, phosphorous, etc.) - each allotrope has a specific melting point.
At 6000K all elements will turn into a gas.there could be hundreds of unknown elements in space so there could be even higher melting points
It varies. Boron and thallium both have relatively high melting points while gallium and indium have very low melting points.
human bones have the highest melting and boiling point we can see this in funerels where bones get burnt at last
The melting points for non-metals range from the lowest for all elements to the highest. The melting point for Helium is effectively 0 K (-273.15 deg C) whereas that for Carbon is 3823 K (3550 deg C).
all group 2 metals are light weight with high melting points beryllium however has the highest melting point due to the low number of electrons shielding the nucleus fro the delocalised atoms
in column two
Solids made of atoms
No, ionic solids have very high melting points. Ionic solids are one of the strongest bonds formed among elements.
These are some metals and salts.
Substances have different melting points. When a substance reaches it melting point it will begin a phase change. Wikipedia's chart for elements of melting points. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_elements_by_melting_point