Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature. There are other, non-metals that are also liquid at room temp, but I'm not certain which ones.
There are 6 metals that are liquids at or near room temperature: Mercury, Caesium (Cesium), Gallium, Bromine, Francium, and Rubidium.
solid compounds. When pure still solid and mainly metallic
There are two elements which are liquid at room temperature and they are Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br). Copernicium (Cn) might be liquid at room temperature but chemists are not sure about it.
At stp (standard temperature and pressure) silver is a solid. The only elements that are liquids at stp are bromine and mercury. There are more elements that are gases than liquids.
in its pure natural state uncombined with other elements, bromine is a LIQUID...
Pure lead melts at about 327 degrees Celsius or 621 degrees Fahrenheit; it boils at about 1749 degrees Celsius or 3180 Fahrenheit. Room temperature is well below either of these so it would be safe to assume that lead would remain a solid in a typical environment.
There are 11 elements that are liquids at room temperature. These are bromine, mercury, cesium, gallium, rubidium, francium, caesium, potassium, sodium, lithium, and... No other elements are liquids at room temperature.
The state of elements depends on the temperature. Most periodic tables give the state of the elements at room temperature. Since only mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature, these are the only elements listed as liquids on the periodic table.
Bromine and mercury are liquids at the room temperature.
no not all metallic are solid at room temperature.
most of the elements are solids at room temperature.
Yes. Bromine and mercury are the only 2 elements that exist as liquids at room temperature (25oC). However, there 4 other elements that exist as liquids at temperatures slighty above room temperature: * Francium at 27oC * Cesium at 28.6oC * Gallium at 30.3oC * Rubidium at 39.5oC
Mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature.
No. The majority of known elements are solids. Only two known elements are liquid at room temperature.
There were 15 elements in my table that were liquids at room temperature.
Only mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature.
Bromine, Br2, and mercury, Hg, are the only elements that are liquids at room temperature.
solid compounds. When pure still solid and mainly metallic