Yes, of course. Water is the most common example.
Water (H2O) is the most common liquid compound on Earth.
When a covalent compound dissolves in a liquid, the compound's molecules are surrounded and separated by the solvent molecules. This disrupts the intermolecular forces within the compound and allows the solvent molecules to interact with the compound's molecules. Ultimately, the compound disperses evenly throughout the solvent, forming a homogeneous solution.
H2O(l) is in the liquid state. That is what the (l) means.
No. Only 2 elements are liquid at room temperature, these are Mercury and Bromine. Mercury(II) bromide or mercuric bromide is the chemical compound composed of mercury and bromine with the formula HgBr₂. This white crystalline solid
as far as i know the B.Pt. is defined as " when the vopour pressure of the liquid is equal to the atomospheric pressure then it is said to be the boiling point of the liquid." similarly "when the vapuor pressure of the solid is equal to atmospheric pressure then its corresponding temperature is called melting point of that compound." so a compound may be a low melting one but the same compound may be ahigh boiling liquid. this is due to the inter & intra molecular forces that exists in the molecules. so there is no specific equation that a compound having a m.p. of 102c will have a b.pt. of some particular value.
Water (H2O) is the most common liquid compound on Earth.
No, Liquid Nails will not stick to joint compound
Yes. "Molten" means the compound has melted into the liquid state. Anything that heat has melted into a liquid can be described as molten.
Milk is a liquid.
Water
H2o
vegetable oil, is a compound because it forms a liquid.
At room temperature, water is a liquid compound. At 0 oC it freezes into a solid, and at 100 oC it vaporizes into a gas.
YES because it is not a compound and not a gas so YES it is a liquid
YES because it is not a compound and not a gas so YES it is a liquid
A liquid is a compound or a mixture; the chemical composition is representative for this liquid.
It's an element.