A highly conductive metal is one where the availability of electron flow is high. Examples are copper, silver, aluminum, etc.
No. Mercury is actually rather conductive, being a metal.
No.
The related link lists all of the elements of the Periodic Table, by electrical conductivity. The top of the list is the worst conductor (Sulfur). The most conductive is silver. The second most conductive metal is copper. Due to expense of silver, copper is preferred. Aluminum is commonly used due to weight factor and cost. (even though a thicker wire is necessary to carry the same current). Gold, while more expensive and less conductive than copper, is resistant to corrosion, and is very ductile.
Mostly metal, sometimes plastic and sometimes rubber+metal or rubber+plastic. Sometimes all 3.
Because metals are the good conductors of current. the conduction band and the valance band are overlap on each other,so when the current passes from the metal because of overlapping on both the bands current passes easily.
its not a metal,it is a metalloid (or semi metal) and yes it is conductive
Yes, osmium is a metal and is conductive.
Graphite is not a metal.
No. Mercury is actually rather conductive, being a metal.
silver
very
Because copper is a metal, then it is conductive.
You would be very stupid, golf clubs being made out of highly conductive metal!!! You shouldn't play in lightening.
A conductive metal is a metal that is able to transport an electric load.
When something is said to be conductive it means electricity or heat can pass through it. Metal and copper are very conductive materials as well as solder.
Jewelry is usually made of highly conductive metals and could easily short across the battery terminals if the jewelry comes into contact with them.
Not necessarily. The conductivity depends on what metal it is and how pure it is.