Try to think of any element that is normally a gas when you think of it.
Example O2 or Oxygen is normally thought of as a gas. BUT, it is also a solid when it is frozen very very cold, and its a liquid when it is warmed up a little bit.
The same thing goes for for the compound Carbon Di-Oxide or CO2 and all the other gases on the Periodic Table.
-BUT-
If you mean which elements, normally solid at around 70 degrees, melt to a liquid, which is above room temperature, but relatively near to 70 degrees, you will need to research that some
And if you mean plain old water, it melts from a solid to a liquid at around 32 degrees
For example the metal gallium.
The great majority of solids have a definite melting point.Some materials as plastics, glass, silicates have a transition temperature from solid to liquid.
Borosilicate glass is a special type of glass which does not melt/crack on heating at high temperatures .It is used in many places such as science labs , at home , in construction ,etc. It is a mixture of salt of boric and silic acids
Anything with a covalent bond has a relatively low boiling point because they intermolecular forces are weak. On the other hand ALOT of energy is required to melt ionic compounds
chemical bonding
a blue flame
molecular solid
The great majority of solids have a definite melting point.Some materials as plastics, glass, silicates have a transition temperature from solid to liquid.
first it would have to melt solids can not evaporate once melted it would depend on the type of medal
Yes. A solid can change shape. The process is called melting. Each solid has a melting point. Ice has a melting point of 0 degrees Celcius. You should learn this when you are in Grade 6 or 7. But let me tell you 1 thing, some solids like wood do not melt, wood burns when the temperature is too hot. The only type of solids that can melt are the type of solids that have the properties of changing into a liquid. You can search up videos in Youtube for more information about solids. You can type in "Ice melting", that would be a simple thing to start with.add. And solids may have their shape altered by applying an external force. That is how a metal can is formed, or a railway iron, or a copper wire, or a metal spoon. Other solids such as wood and plastic may be similarly deformed.
Once the ambient temperature is above freezing ice will begin to melt.
In polar molecular solids' molecules are held together by relatively stronger dipole-dipole interactions.
Network solids.
crystalline solids
Solids
ice
Metallic
where the hell is answer