iodine
iodine is the only halogen in solid form. so it is the halogen which gives violet vapours on sublimation...
Iodine is the halogen that is commonly purified by sublimation. When iodine is heated, it directly changes from a solid to a gas without passing through the liquid phase, allowing impurities to be left behind in the solid form.
The halogen that undergoes sublimation at room temperature is iodine.
Sodium is a silvery-grey metallic solid that reacts violently with water, causing it to explode.
Halides are minerals that contain a halogen ion plus one or more other elements. Halogens are elements from Group 7A of the periodic table. This group includes the elements fluorine and chlorine.
Iodine is a nonradioactive halogen that occurs as a solid at room temperature and pressure.
Iodine is the halogen that sublimes directly from a solid to a gas at standard pressure and temperature.
iodine is the only halogen in solid form. so it is the halogen which gives violet vapours on sublimation...
Carbon is a non metalic solid.
That is in The Science in matter. It's normal phase is Halogen.
Yes. A solid nonmetal of the halogen family.
Iodine is the halogen that is commonly purified by sublimation. When iodine is heated, it directly changes from a solid to a gas without passing through the liquid phase, allowing impurities to be left behind in the solid form.
Iodine, Astatine, Uus
Iodine ( I2 ) the fourth halogen (after F2 ,Cl2 -both gases- and Br2 -liquid- ) Iodine has a shiny, dark grey, metallic look (but it is not a metal) with crystal forms which subliMATES to violet vapour. It is slightly soluble in water, better in a Iodide solution (to form I3- complex ions) and in ethanol (red-brown tincture)
The halogen that undergoes sublimation at room temperature is iodine.
Grey-Black Solid
I believe so, because the atoms inside have a sorta different, lets say mind. It doesn't react in the same way as the rest of them.