The question is meaningless. The "normal" phase of water depends on the temperature and pressure conditions it's under. On Earth at "reasonable" temperatures and pressures, it can be a solid, a liquid, or a gas; none of these is inherently more "normal" than any of the others.
In normal-phase chromatography, the stationary phase is polar and the mobile phase is a mixture of non-polar solvents such as hexane and slightly more polar solvents such as isopropanol. water is the most polar solvent of all solvents. If you use water as a mobile phase, the polar analytes will remain dissolved in water and there will be no retention of analytes on the stationary phase. If there is no retention on stationary phase, there is no separation
In normal-phase chromatography, the stationary phase is polar and the mobile phase is a mixture of non-polar solvents such as hexane and slightly more polar solvents such as isopropanol. water is the most polar solvent of all solvents. If you use water as a mobile phase, the polar analytes will remain dissolved in water and there will be no retention of analytes on the stationary phase. If there is no retention on stationary phase, there is no separation
what is the normal phase of the elment Argon The normal phase of the element Argon is a gas.
The normal phase of Ununnilium is synthetic. The normal phase of Ununnilium is synthetic.
The normal phase of Silicon is solid.
the normal phase of zink is bannana
The normal phase for platinum is solid. At room temperature, platinum is a solid.
the normal phase of the Element Xe is gas
Actually the normal phase of calcium is a SOLID.
the normal phase of titantium is solid
The answer depends on what is meant by "normal phase".
The normal phase of molybdenum is when it is at normal room temperature.