The scientific standard typically refers to the state change you refer to in terms of going up, so you need to know the melting point of aluminum to know when it becomes solid, which is 933.47 Kelvin (660.32°C or 1220.58°F).
So anything above the melting point would be a liquid.
And anything below the melting point would be a solid.
The melting point of Aluminum is 660.32°C, 933.47 Kelvin or 1220.58 °F.
From 933.5 K to 2740 K (660.5 oC to 2467 oC).
The melting point of aluminium, where it changes state from a liquid to a solid, and vise-versa, is 660 degrees Celsius, or 1220 degrees Fahrenheit.
The melting point of aluminium is 660,32 oC.
936 K or 663 oC
660c
no
its something
Aluminium is not a liquid at room temperature.
Any of the above based on the temperature. Solid at room temperature.
No.
I am not exactly sure, but I know that aluminum is naturally found in alumina, which is extracted by electricity and another element. It soon becomes a liquid which cools into the aluminum used in a soda can. So this could be considered a mixture.
Aluminum Is A Solid!
its something
Aluminum becomes liquid at its melting point:933.47 K ​(660.32 °C, ​1220.58 °F)
Aluminium is not a liquid at room temperature.
Aluminum is only liquid in its molten state, so liquid aluminum is used for pouring into molds or forming in some way to create a finished product. The product "Liquid Aluminum" is used to repair soft metals, making molds, filling holes in metal containers.
Liquid Density at M.P.:2.375 g/cm³
no no no no no. never use liquid gasket
solid
Solid.
solid
Outer core
Any of the above based on the temperature. Solid at room temperature.