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Most non metals are usually liquids or gases at room temperature, although not specifically one or the other. It depends on the properties of the substance. Most metals are solids at room temperature, with the exception of Mercury.
Carbon is a solid; oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen are gases at room temperature.
No. All metalloids are solid at room temperature.
No. With the exception of mercury all metals are solids at room temrperature and have negligible vapor pressures. Mercury does have a measurable small vapor pressure at room temperature, enough to be a hazard.
The so-called noble or inert gases are in Group 18, the last group on the right of the periodic table of the elements.
The noble gases
All of the noble gases (group 18) are gases at room temperature. In addition, fluorine, chlorine, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen are gases at room temperature.
All the members of the noble gases family (group 18 of the periodic table) are gases at room temperature.
There are 118 elements, not 14. Most are solid at room temperature. Only 11 elements are gasses.
There is no method to designate such properties. Only symbols with atomic number are mentioned.
All group 18 elements (the noble gases) exist as monatormic gases at room temperature and standard pressure. All other elements form diatomic gases, if they exist as gas under the specified conditions. Among the listed elements there is only one noble gas: Argon
All group 18 elements (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, radon) are noble gases.
Near the top right. The Periodic Trend for boiling point is increasing from top right to bottom left. (Note: lower the boiling point, the more likely the element is gas at room temperature.) Elements such as Nitrogen, Oxygen, Helium, and Neon are all gases at room temperature.
no not all metallic are solid at room temperature.
Most non metals are usually liquids or gases at room temperature, although not specifically one or the other. It depends on the properties of the substance. Most metals are solids at room temperature, with the exception of Mercury.
The atoms of non-metals are covalently bonded in a molecule. These molecules are joint by weak intermolecular forces of attraction which are easily overcame. Hence the boiling point is low and usually below room temperature so at room temperature, they are gaseous.
All things in a room will eventually be at room temperature.