carbon
only metal elements conduct electricity, and they do it very well
no because its a covalent compound, it undergoes covalent bonding. if it was a metallic or ionic then it would conduct when molten or in aqueous state. the only element that undergoes a covalent bonding and conducts electricity is graphite, no other element or allotrope conducts.
Bromine only conducts electricity when bonded with another metal/element.
Bromine is a gas at liquid temperature. It can only conduct electricity when bonded with another metal or element.
Ionic compounds conduct electricity in the solid state as their ions are fixed in a lattice. Covalent compounds only conduct electricity when melted or dissolved due to the mobility of charged particles in solution.
Yes a silver coin can conduct electricity, Silver is one of the most commonly used to conduct electricity. Yes, silver is a very good conductor of electricity
Sulfur is generally not a good conductor of heat and electricity, if it is the atom itself you are talking about. If Sulfur is present in an ionic compound, (example: Copper Sulfide, Lead Sulfide), then this compound will conduct electricity in only the MOLTEN state. Also, if Sulfur is in a polyatomic ion (example: Sulfate) and this polyatomic ion forms an ionic compound with another metal, in an aqueous solution, then it will conduct electricity. Remember, ionic compounds only conduct in the MOLTEN/LIQUID state. Glad to help, regards
They conduct electricity only if they are electrolytes: in water solutions or when they are melted.
Blankets made of materials like cotton or fleece do not conduct electricity. However, metallic or electrically conductive materials, like metal fibers or wires, can be woven into blankets for special purposes, such as electric heated blankets.
there is no element that can't conduct electricity, only elements that do it well and others that don't do it so well. Rubber is a very poor conductor of electricity, while copper, silver and gold are very good conductors.
Insulators. Their valence electrons are tightly bound because the valence shell is close to full or full. Since each shell can only only hold a certain amount of electrons, the number of electrons depends on which shell is the outer or valence shell.
No. Water can only conduct electricity in its liquid state with dissolved ionic solutes.