The boiling point of chlorine is -34,04 oC.
The melting point of chlorine is - 101,5 oC.
the only known solid-liquid or "soquid" on the planet today is Wendy's Frosty. Therefore, chlorine can only be a solid at room temperature
Chlorine is a gas at room temperature. It has a boiling point of -34°C and a melting point of -101°C.
It is a solid that can be liquefied In order to retrieve it to the solid form you need to allow the liquid to evaporate. It will leave the solid form. It is salt when chlorine is added, creating sodium chloride.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- At normal conditions of temperature and pressure chlorine is a gas. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chlorine is not a solid, those tablets you get for your pool are not elemental chlorine. They are often hypochlorites (bleaches), but can be many different chemicals that allow introduction of chlorine into the pool water. You can liquefy chlorine at about -30C (not much colder than your freezer), and freeze it at about -100C. But if you happened to have found a bucket full of chlorine sitting around, it'd be a gas.
under normal conditions, chlorine is a gas, so it has no texture
Chlorine can change from a gas to a liquid or solid under specific conditions. At room temperature and pressure, chlorine is a gas. By reducing the temperature or increasing the pressure, chlorine can be condensed into a liquid. At very low temperatures, chlorine can solidify into a crystalline form.
This varies depending upon which nonmetal you are asking about. Chlorine is a gas at room temperature, but bromine is a liquid and carbon is a solid.
the only known solid-liquid or "soquid" on the planet today is Wendy's Frosty. Therefore, chlorine can only be a solid at room temperature
Chlorine, in its elemental form, is a diatomic gas at room temperature and pressure, so it does not have a surface. When chlorine is in a liquid or solid state, it appears as a yellow-greenish liquid or solid, and it does not have a shiny or dull surface.
Chlorine is a gas at room temperature. It has a boiling point of -34°C and a melting point of -101°C.
No, not all halogens are gases at room temperature. Fluorine and chlorine are gases at room temperature, bromine is a liquid, and iodine is a solid.
At room temperature and pressure, fluorine and chlorine are gases, bromine is liquid and iodine is a solid
Chlorine is a gas at room temperature. It has a boiling point of -34°C and a melting point of -101°C, which means it exists as a gas at standard room temperature.
None of them are Fluorine, Chlorine and Bromine are all gases at room temperature. Iodine and Astatine are both solid at room temperature.
Bromine is liquid at room temperature.Its symbol is Br.It has 7 valence electrons.
It is a solid that can be liquefied In order to retrieve it to the solid form you need to allow the liquid to evaporate. It will leave the solid form. It is salt when chlorine is added, creating sodium chloride.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- At normal conditions of temperature and pressure chlorine is a gas. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chlorine is not a solid, those tablets you get for your pool are not elemental chlorine. They are often hypochlorites (bleaches), but can be many different chemicals that allow introduction of chlorine into the pool water. You can liquefy chlorine at about -30C (not much colder than your freezer), and freeze it at about -100C. But if you happened to have found a bucket full of chlorine sitting around, it'd be a gas.