Gold, platinum. Tin and lead are also quite dense. Osmium is the most dense on the Periodic Table.
In general, the heavier elements have more neutrons and will end up as being denser. Osmium is the densist natural element.
Osmium - its density is 22.57 g/cc
Osmium
plutonium
Even if metals can be less dense than the sugar, metals are solid and not of powder
Generally metals are hard, dense, with good thermal and electrical conductivity, can form cations, many are malleable or ductiles, etc.
Osmium is the densest of the elements. The most dense pure metal is osmium, Os, with a density of 22.61 g/cm3 (that's about twice the density of lead).Other very dense metals are:iridium, Ir, 22.56 g/cm3platinum, Pt, 21.4 g/cm3rhenium, Re, 21.0 g/cm3neptunium, Np, 20.4 g/cm3plutonium, Pu, 19.8 g/cm3gold, Au, 19.3 g/cm3tungsten, W, 19.3 g/cm3mercury, Hg, 13.53 g/cm3Lead, Pb, which is usually considered pretty dense, is only 11.4 g/cm3! In case this isn't enough, lead will float on liquid mercury, which has a density of 13.5 g/cm3.
Metals are crystalline because the bond via metallic bonding, are unrestricted as to number and position of nearest neighbor atoms, and have dense atomic packing. Due to these traits, they form a lattice microstructure (i.e., crystal)
Heavy metals such as lead, gold, tungsten or platinum. Uranium is very dense, but an element and metal called osmium is the most dense.
on metals are brittle. They are less dense and non sonorous
Even if metals can be less dense than the sugar, metals are solid and not of powder
Many metals are lustrous, hard, dense.
Even if metals can be less dense than the sugar, metals are solid and not of powder
Potassium and Lithium
Osmium and gold are more dense than mercury.See the Related Questions for a complete list of the most dense elements (many of which are more dense than mercury).
Yes, there are at least two: Iodine vapor (molar mass 254) and Radon gas (222, but not natural occurring) are heavier (and so more dense) than Mercury vapor (200 g/mol).
These elements have the general chemical and physical properties of metals: they are dense, hard, conductive, lose electrons etc.
Generally metals are hard, dense, with good thermal and electrical conductivity, can form cations, many are malleable or ductiles, etc.
outer core
Almost anything dense. Metals, water and stone.
I think it is because metals are non-porous, with more dense and compacted molecules compared with water, wood or other porous materials.