You would need to use very high temperatures
Yes salts have a low melting point. I think...
hydrogen is a gas consequently doesn't have a melting point. You can't melt oxygen can you. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Actually oxygen can freeze and melt: its melting point is -361.8°F (-218.8°C). Even hydrogen can freeze and melt: its melting point is -434.49 °F(−259.16°C) These are very cold temperatures!
Tungsten is a metal with a particularly high melting point (which has made it suitable for use as a filament in incandescent bulbs); ionic compounds such as granite have high melting points. Ceramics have high melting points.
Chromium has a high melting point due to its strong metallic bonding. The metal atoms are held together by a sea of delocalized electrons, which require a lot of energy to break and melt the solid structure. This results in a high melting point for chromium.
Melting points are ranges usually. It starts when the first crystal of the substance being tested melts and ends when the last crystal melts. Therefore the smallest sample possible and the slowest rate of heating will give the most accurate melting point.
Arsenic does melt, but has a very high melting point of 1503°F.
Yes salts have a low melting point. I think...
well it depends if it can melt if the state changes at a hot temperature= high melting point ll ll ll ll ll ll cold ll = low melting point
No , table salt (sodium chloride) has a melting point of 801°C
Potassium iodide, like salts in general, has a high melting point. It does not melt easily when heated.
hydrogen is a gas consequently doesn't have a melting point. You can't melt oxygen can you. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Actually oxygen can freeze and melt: its melting point is -361.8°F (-218.8°C). Even hydrogen can freeze and melt: its melting point is -434.49 °F(−259.16°C) These are very cold temperatures!
High because you make cakes with it so it wont melt
It depends on the specific compound. Some compounds will melt when heated to a certain temperature, while others may decompose, ignite, or undergo chemical reactions instead of melting. The melting point of a compound is a characteristic physical property that varies depending on the compound's chemical structure.
actually its is filament.now the answertungsten has high melting point.
Ionic compounds typically have high melting points because the electrostatic forces holding the ions together are strong, requiring a lot of energy to break the bonds. As a result, ionic compounds usually melt at high temperatures, often above 500°C.
No, a compound can have a melting point range due to impurities or phase transitions, resulting in a melting temperature range rather than a single temperature.
Potassium chloride has a high melting point due to its strong ionic bonding between potassium cations and chloride anions. The electrostatic forces holding the ions together require a significant amount of energy to break, leading to the high melting point of potassium chloride.