Carbon dioxide is a gas at room temperature because its molecules have enough thermal energy at room temperature that they won't stick together. Heat (or lack of it) is what drives change of state.
At room temperature (around 25°C), carbon dioxide is a gas.
At room temperature: Oxygen & Nitrogen are gases, Carbon is solid, & Mercury is a liquid.
Mercury is not an example of a gas at room temperature. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature.
Oxygen and nitrogen are gases at room temperature, while carbon and mercury are not.
Carbon monoxide is a gas at room temperature. It is odorless and colorless, making it difficult to detect without specialized equipment.
You can't see Carbon Dioxide at room temperature.
Carbon is a solid at room temperature. Not a gas.
At room temperature (around 25°C), carbon dioxide is a gas.
At room temperature: Oxygen & Nitrogen are gases, Carbon is solid, & Mercury is a liquid.
Mercury is not an example of a gas at room temperature. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature.
Carbon is a solid at room temperature.
Oxygen and nitrogen are gases at room temperature, while carbon and mercury are not.
Carbon is a solid liquid instead of a gas at room temperature.
Carbon dioxide is an inorganic gas at room temperature.
gas
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There are several allotropes of carbon, all of which are solid at room temperature.