How about I tell you what substance is not a solid metal at room temperature.
Everything else is a solid metal at room temperature.
Look around you. Everything you can touch that does not slosh right now is a solid at room temperature. Plastics, metals, wood, plant fibers among the millions of things that are solids at room temp. You need to be a bit more specific in your question.
I'm pretty sure its Bromine
It's sulfur. I'm sure of it
Examples: lead, silicon dioxide, marble, wood, rubber, glass, iron sulfide, uranium oxide, etc.
There are millions of substances which are solid at room temperature. It would be impossible to list them all.
lots of them.. lead for instance
platinum
Gold is a solid at room temperature. It wouldn't make a good wedding ring otherwise.
Sucrose can be both solid or liquid. At room temperature, however, it's a solid.
The freezing point (more commonly referred to as the melting point) of Holmium is: 1734 K or 1461 C or 2662 F.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
The zinc's state at room temperature is solid commercially it is available as chunks.
How about I tell you what substance is not a solid metal at room temperature. Mercury Everything else is a solid metal at room temperature.
Check the melting point of the substance. If the melting point is below room temperature, then the substance is liquid and if the melting point is above room temperature then it is solid.
At room temperature and standard pressure the element Boron is a solid.
K2CrO4
Tgis question is simply saying what is its state of matter at room temperature. This substance or uranium is a solid at room temperature.
Yes, at room temperature.
Room temperature is 25 oC so it would still be a solid. It would be 104 degrees F... So. unless the substance's boiling point is below that, it would be a solid. otherwise it would be a gas.
Gold is a solid at room temperature. It wouldn't make a good wedding ring otherwise.
sulphur is a solid at room temperature, others are gases
It is not possible. You call the substance a solid if it is so at room temperature. It is not possible for a solid (at room temperature) to also be as a liquid at room temperature.
At room temperature, Magnesium is a grayish-silver solid metallic substance. It is very light in weight.
It becomes a silvery white solid at room temperature.