Bromine
bromine
sulfur
Sulfur
bromine
Mercury
Water conducts electricity very well, except very pure water, which is not what you normally get.
In solid form calcium chloride doesn't conduct electricity, but dissolved in water it conducts electricity quite well.
Copper, silver, stainless steel are some things that are shiny and conduct electricity.
The alkali metals, transition metals and metals in group 13, 14, and 15 on the periodic table all are malleable and good conductors of electricityEach of these groups has different characteristics, but all are able to conduct electricity and be formed or shaped easily.
Ruthenium is a conductive element. It is a transition metal. It conducts electricity at 1.4x10^7 S/m. It also has thermal conductivity of 120 W/(m K).
Water.
Electricity cables as it conducts electricity well & hot water vessels & pipework as it is a fairly inert metal.
because gold is a metal it conducts heat and electricity very well
Yes. It is a metal and conducts electricity well. It is used as part of the switch in thermostats, and so forth.
Saline is probably the best example (common salt dissolved in water).
Whether it conducts electricity or magnetism well. If it does, it is definitely a metal, although not all metals conduct electricity or magnetism.
Cu
No, gold conducts electricity very well.
Copper
All elements will conduct heat to some extent. metals conduct heat and electricity the best; metalliods conduct heat and electricity good too but not as good as metals. nonmetals are poor conductors.
Mercury does well on its own. Hence the reason for mercury switches. Electrolyte solution. Every kind of metal, when squeezed, produces electricity due to sudden polarization. Mercury is a conductor of electricity, even in standard conditions.
Metals conduct heat and electricity well.