They usually expand and when the temperature gets high enough, turns to liquid.
Copper is a solid at room temperature.
Titanium is a solid at room temperature.
Vanadium is a solid metal at room temperature.
it is a solid! :)It is a solid.
This phenomenon is called melting, the ordered molecules of the solid becomes non-ordered in the liquid phase.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
Sucrose can be both solid or liquid. At room temperature, however, it's a solid.
Platinum's state of matter at room temperature would be a solid.
Boron is a solid at room temperature
The element, Selenium, is a solid at room temperature.
The phase change that would occur as the temperature of the sample at 3 atm is raised from -90ºC to -50ºC is solid to liquid. The sample would transition from a solid phase to a liquid phase as it heats up within the two temperature points mentioned while remaining at 3 atm pressure.
Calcium is a solid in room temperature