Zinc and other metals
No solid iodine does not conduct electricity.
Ag (silver) because it is a metal and metals conduct electricity no matter in solid or liquid phase.
They are silvery metals that conduct electricity.
All metals conduct electricity.All metals conduct electricity.All metals conduct electricity.All metals conduct electricity.
Liquid mercury can conduct electricity, it's what makes mercury thermostats work. As for solid mercury, it conducts electricity in solid phase as all metals do.
The electrons of metals are delocalized, meaning they are free to move throughout the solid structure. This is what allows metals to conduct electricity and heat efficiently.
all metals can conduct electricity
all metals conduct electricity but alumiun doesn't conduct it as well as others all metals conduct electricity but alumiun doesn't conduct it as well as others
Metals can conduct electricity because they have free electrons that can move easily between atoms, allowing electricity to flow. Non-metals, on the other hand, generally do not conduct electricity well because they do not have free electrons available for conduction.
Yes, metals will conduct electricity in liquid form because of the free electrons.
The physical properties of different metals make them useful for different purposes in metals can move through the metal, allowing metals to conduct electricity.
By definition, a solid metal, including liquid mercury, in its elemental form should conduct electricity. Under what condition a metal cannot conduct electricity? Normally when a metal is oxidized, the result is highly resistive, but then the oxide film (such as rust) is no longer considered metallic. Some metals, such as sodium, don't normally exist in its elemental form in nature. If these metals are somehow kept out of trouble (air), they too should conduct electricity. ==================================