Magnesium has a higher melting point.
The melting point of lithium is 180.5 degrees C the melting point of lithium is 356.9 degrees F
The metal with the highest melting point is Tungsten (W) at 3410 degrees Celsius (6170 degrees Fahrenheit). However, technically Carbon has a higher melting point, though not under normal atmospheric conditions. This is because it sublimates (turns directly from a solid to a gas) at 6740 degrees Fahrenheit under normal circumstances.(Carbon also doesn't count because it is not a metal, but a nonmetal).However, if you are taking consideration of all elements and explore which element has the highest boiling point, then it is Rhenium (Rh), which turns to gaseous form at the temperature of 5592*C (10 097.6*F), followed by Tungsten (W) which boils off at 5540*C (10 004*F).Hope it was useful...!!!
This element is helium with a melting point of -272,20 0C.
Magnesium sulfate has a high melting and boiling point, as it is made of Ionic bonds which are very strong. A lot of energy is needed to break them. So ionic compounds have high melting and boiling points. See related link for more information.
No. Solids do not boil, but they may sublime, which is when a solid goes directly into the gas phase without melting first. However, lithium does not sublime. Its melting point is 180.54 degrees Celsius, and its boiling point is 1342 degrees Celsius. So lithium is a liquid before reaching its boiling point.
Magnesium then silicon then chlorine
The melting point of lithium is: 180,54 0C.
Carbon has the highest melting point of any element on the Periodic Table. It's melting point is 3823K
magnesium
After Carbon (in form of diamond), the element Tungsten (W) has the second highest melting point of 3695 K, 3422 °C, 6192 °F
No. The element C (carbon) is a nonmetal, not a metal. It does have the highest melting point of all the elements, though.
it would be most probably the one element closet to the middle
Carbon (C) is the element with the highest known melting point (mp). The mp of C is 3500-degrees Celsius.
Carbon (C) has the highest melting point out of all the elements, and so, as it's in the first 20 elements, it has the highest melting point of the first 20 elements too. Its melting point is 3823K.
The natural element with the highest melting point is good old Carbon! Its melting point is 3527 degrees, C. The element with the second highest melting point is Tungsten at 3422 degrees, C.
This element is wolfram (W): 1 422 0C.
The melting point of wolfram (W) is: 3 422 0C.