With the exception of Mercury and bromine, which is a liquid, metals are solid at room temperature.
Most metals are solid at room temperature. The exceptions are Mercury and Gallium, which are liquids at room temp.
solid, except mercury
gas
Solid
No, only mercury (Hg) is a liquid. All other metals are solids at room temperature, although gallium (Ga) and cesium (Cs) have melting points just above room temperature.
It depends at what temperature. If we talk about room temperature then a natural state of a metal like Mercury is liquid (same as some non-metals like glass) while others like Copper are solid. Of course, in the vacuum of space where there is no influence of heat or sunlight, all metals are solid.
Some metals are naturally malleable, but most metals can be made more malleable by heating it to high temperature.
Because of physical change
Solid state diffusion (between metals) and gaseous diffusion (a gas in a metal).
That obviously depends on the temperature. At room temperature, most metals are solid.
Solid
Most metals at room temperature are solids
Low Melting Point. Most metals have high melting point and are solids at room temperature.
The state of matter of most metals is the solid state. Mercury and Gallium are the only exceptions, as they are liquids at room temperature.
Non-metals are any of the non-metallic elements found in Groups 14, 15 and 16 of the periodic table. At room temperature, most non-metals exist as either gases or solids.
No metals are in a gaseous form at room temperature. Most are solids and one (Mercury chemical symbol Hg) is a liquid.
Fire. It cannot melt.
Non-metals are any of the non-metallic elements found in Groups 14, 15 and 16 of the Periodic Table. At room temperature, most non-metals exist as either gases or solids.
Almost all metals have highly boiling and melting points. Hence they are solids at room temperature. Only Mercury is liquid at room temperature.
On the Periodic Table, the majority of elements are metals and some of elements are non-metals . Most metals have a high melting point which means therefore the answer to this question is solid.
No, only mercury (Hg) is a liquid. All other metals are solids at room temperature, although gallium (Ga) and cesium (Cs) have melting points just above room temperature.