Yttrium has a melting point of 1526 °C and a boiling point of 3336 °C. It will be solid.
Yttrium is opaque.
The temperature of the nitrogen at room temperature is whatever the temperature of the room is.
Room temperature IS room temperature, you question makes no sense.
The element Yttrium has 89 protrons and 39 electrons The element Yttrium has 89 protrons and 39 electrons The elemetnt Yttrium has 39 proto The elemetnt Yttrium has 39 proto The elemetnt Yttrium has 39 proto The elemetnt Yttrium has 39 proto
Yttrium is frequently present in lanthanoids minerals. Now yttrium is considered a transition metal, not a lanthanoid.
Yttrium is a solid metal at r.t.
Yes, Yttrium is a solid at room temperature, as are all metals with the exception of mercury.
No. Yttrium is a solid metal. The only two elements liquid at room temperature are mercury and bromine.
It'd be a metallic solid
Yttrium is a solid at room temperature, as are all metals apart from Mercury.
Barium is a solid at room temperature, and has a melting point of 727°C. Barium at room temperature is explosively combustible, especially as powder, due to its extreme reactivity with oxygen in the air. Barium sulfate is used in medical radiology, and barium is used with yttrium in YBCO high-temperature superconducting compounds (yttrium barium copper oxide).
Yttrium is used to increase the strength of aluminium composite. The addition of yttrium to alloys generally improves workability, adds resistance to high-temperature fragments, and significantly enhances resistance to high-temperature insulators
Michael Sokaski has written: 'Low temperature deformation characteristics of yttrium single crystals' -- subject(s): Yttrium
The room temperature is...the room temperature !!
Yttrium is opaque.
Yttrium got its name from a town in Sweden named Ytterby. The element was discovered close to that town, and Yttrium was named after it.
The temperature of the nitrogen at room temperature is whatever the temperature of the room is.