Halides are minerals that contain a halogen ion plus one or more other elements. Halogens are elements from Group 7A of the periodic table. This group includes the elements fluorine and chlorine.
The fase an element is in, in this case solid, depends on the temperature, in chemistry, room temperature is the temperature used when deciding whether it's solid or not. almost every element in the Periodic Table (so all of them) is solid at room temperature, but once we look at the halogens, most aren't, only bromine is liquid, hydrogen, fluorine and chlorine are gas. so that leaves space for two solids, Iodine and Astatine.
i know that iodine and bromine are solid halogens. but i dunno if the're common..
Chlorine is the most important halogen.
This halogen is iodine (I).
iodine
iodine
iodine is the only halogen in solid form. so it is the halogen which gives violet vapours on sublimation...
Because is the heaviest halogen known today.
Nonmetals can be solid, liquid or gaseous.
Potassium is a metal element. It is not a halogen. Example for halogen is Chlorine.
iodine
iodine is the only halogen in solid form. so it is the halogen which gives violet vapours on sublimation...
SOLID man
Iodine
bromine (Br2)
Carbon is a non metalic solid.
Yes. A solid nonmetal of the halogen family.
Because is the heaviest halogen known today.
This hypothetical halogen will have the atomic number 133, will be solid, dense and extremely unstable.
Iodine, Astatine, Uus
At room temperature iodine is a solid halogen.
Nonmetals can be solid, liquid or gaseous.