Solid metals are often shiny, ductile(can be pulled into wires), malleable(can be hammered into thin sheets), and good condutors of heat and electricity.
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(4)they are brittle and lack metallic luster.
conductor of heat and electricity
Malleable
brittle !
Nonmetals in the solid state tend to be brittle and poor conductors of heat.
the physical characteristics of a non metal are not ductile meaning it cant be drawn into wires non mallable meaning it cant be rolled into thin sheets also its poor in luster meaning its not shinny also nonmetals are brittle
Some are solid (eg carbon) some are gaseous (eg oxygen) and one is liquid (bromine).
This is a solid.
Freezing is the phase change that occurs when a liquidchanges into a solid.
ice is solid phase of water
Sublimation is a change of phase: direct transformation from solid to gas.
No every phase has those characteristics
Malleable substances can be hammered into a thin sheet. This is a characteristic of all metals in the solid phase. In contrast nonmetals are brittle in the solid phase. If you take a piece of sulfur and whack it with a hammer a few times you will turn it into sulfur powder not a thin sheet of sulfur.
1. solid substane , 2. crystal substance
Nonmetals in the solid state tend to be brittle and poor conductors of heat.
there are only one solid nonmetal: Bromine
Yes, in solid form nonmetals tend to be brittle, however, several nonmetals are gasses and one, bromine, is a liquid.
Well, non metals are a gas at room temperature and so, they were never really a solid in the first place.
Solid, liquid, gas phases and their transitions vs. temperature & pressure.
Most nonmetals are poor conductions of electricity and heat and are reactive with other elements. Solid nonmetals are dull and brittle.
Carbon, phosphorus, sulfur, selenium, and iodine