Titanium will turn into a liquid state at 1941 K
It will then boil at 3560 K but it is sill Titanium at both these temperatures,
you can put a blowtorch to it for a year and it will still be titanium just in a different state.
However if you want to get titanium into a state where it breaks down into something you can no longer call Titanium you need to think about temperatures like Plank temperature (absolute hot) which is predicted to be around 1.41679 × 10^32 K or absolute zero which unsurprisingly is 0 K , anything beyond these temperature ranges will do funny things to the atomic structure not to mention space and possibly time too.
Titanium is a solid at room temperature.
Titanium is a less reactive metal and is placed below magnesium but above iron in the reactivity series. It does not react with water or dilute acids at room temperature but can react with steam to form titanium dioxide and hydrogen gas.
The solidus temperature of titanium is approximately 1660°C (3020°F). This is the temperature at which titanium changes from a solid to a liquid state during heating.
Titanium's state of matter at standard temperature and pressure is solid, as seen from its description in the Periodic Table, but all states of matter does exist for titanium under certain conditions. Thus, titanium can be a liquid or a gas, or be in a indistinguishable phase of plasma.
Titanium will burn if it is heated to a high enough temperature in air, You need a higher temperature than a match or candle flame, it also helps of the surface area to volume ratio is high, e.g. if you are setting fire to thin strips or swarf. The Oxygen and Nitrogen will then react with the Titanium which leaves behind a very hard Titanium Nitride or Titanium Oxide. It is difficult to extingush Titanium which is already on fire, CO2, water and foam will only feed it with more oxygen. It also burns with a very high temperature (sometimes it is used in fireworks). To melt titanium, you have to put it into a chamber where you can extract all of the Nitrogen and Oxygen (often back filling with some non-reactive Argon gas).
Titanium is a solid at room temperature.
Titanium is a solid.
2703oF
Titanium is a less reactive metal and is placed below magnesium but above iron in the reactivity series. It does not react with water or dilute acids at room temperature but can react with steam to form titanium dioxide and hydrogen gas.
The solidus temperature of titanium is approximately 1660°C (3020°F). This is the temperature at which titanium changes from a solid to a liquid state during heating.
Titanium's state of matter at standard temperature and pressure is solid, as seen from its description in the Periodic Table, but all states of matter does exist for titanium under certain conditions. Thus, titanium can be a liquid or a gas, or be in a indistinguishable phase of plasma.
The expansion ratio of liquid titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4) to its gaseous form is approximately 1:800. This means that one part of liquid TiCl4 expands to about 800 parts of gas when it vaporizes. The exact ratio can vary slightly depending on temperature and pressure conditions.
Again, no, it is an element.
By lowering the temperature on increasing the pressure.
[Ar] 3d2 4s2
A gas become a liquid after cooling to the adequate temperature - the condensation point.
Melting point: the temperature at which a solid become a liquid. Boiling point: the temperature at which a liquid become a gas.