There is no such element as this is physically possible. The liquid state is only achieved when the temperature has reached the melting point of the material. And, the melting point is, by definition, at a higher temperature than the freezing point.
However, there are substances that are liquids in cold temperatures (many oils) as well as substances that are solids in warm temperatures (most metals); but this does not mean that the oils do not freeze and the metals do not melt.
Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at standard conditions for temperature and pressure
physical form (solid gas, liquid)temperatures at phase changechemical composition and atom structurephysical form (solid gas, liquid)temperatures at phase changechemical composition and atom structure
No because Liquid C02 can only be in solid or gas form not Liquid due to the propeties of the element.
A liquid gas solution is a liquid made up of an element(s) that are normally gas at room temperature. A liquid solid solution is made up of an element(s) that are normally solids at room temperature... Which is around 21 degrees Celsius.
Any of the above based on the temperature. Solid at room temperature.
Phosphorus can exist in any of these three forms, but is a waxy solid at standard conditions.Some Additional Information:White phosphorus is solid at temperatures below 44.2° C,gas at temperatures above 280.5° C, and liquid in between.
No, helium cannot be hammered into sheets. Helium is the only element that cannot be cooled sufficiently to become a solid. It remains liquid at the lowest temperatures we can achieve, and that's very, very close to absolute zero. As helium is a gas or a liquid and never a solid (at least not yet) we don't see it treated as a solid, like being hammered into sheets.
it is a liquid element.
Yes, depending on its temperature and the pressure on it. It's also easy to make mercury gas.
Solid residue is what remains after a liquid evaporates.
yes, every element has certain temperatures at which they change form
At normal temperatures, it is a solid.
It is called freezing, example water(liquid) turning into ice(solid) when kept in freezer(cold temperatures).
Vinegar is a liquid at temperatures around 25 degrees celcius.
Yes. At ordinary temperatures, plumbum (Latin for the element LEAD) is a solid.
The cup is solid, but the water remains liquid unless you freeze it into ice.
solid