The boiling point of lithium is 1342 0C.
The melting point of lithium is 180,54 0C.
You could possibly arrange an experiment for different substances to melt and boil at the same time, but they would not do so at the same temperature. Different substances have different properties, they do not all melt and boil at the same temperature.
Lithium is a metal and for a metal it has a fairly low melting point (180°C or 360°F) a temperature you can easily reach in your kitchen oven (but don't try to melt lithium at home!)
yes it can
Lithium is a solid metal at standard temperature and pressure.
because substances boil at a higher temperature than when it melts. therefore, boiling takes more energy than melting and more energy takes more time.
You could possibly arrange an experiment for different substances to melt and boil at the same time, but they would not do so at the same temperature. Different substances have different properties, they do not all melt and boil at the same temperature.
Lithium boils at 1615oK or 1342oC or 2448oF
Lithium is a metal and for a metal it has a fairly low melting point (180°C or 360°F) a temperature you can easily reach in your kitchen oven (but don't try to melt lithium at home!)
The melting point of lithium is 180,54 0C.
An inpure chemical boil over a range of temperature. While, a pure solution melt at a fixed temperature.
The triple point of water (where you can boil water yet not melt ice; this can only happen with the correct temperature and pressure)
it lowers the temperature by forming hydrogen bonds that allow it to melt and boil faster
sugar, not already cold and is originally solid. think, do you have to boil ice??
Water boils when the temperature gets to 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees celsius. Water does not melt. It changes into a vapor-like fog and disappears into a gas.
yes it can
yes you can but it will melt and get you mucky
Lithium is a solid metal at standard temperature and pressure.