Glass is an example of a solid that is amorphous (lacks a regular crystalline structure) and brittle (easily breaks or shatters when subjected to stress).
One example of a brittle nonconducting solid at 25 degrees Celsius is sulfur.
No. Helium is a gas, not a solid.
i dont know sorry No. It is characterized by stiffness.
Almost all of the non-metals are brittle when solid. For example, sulfur.
Glass is an example of a solid that is amorphous (lacks a regular crystalline structure) and brittle (easily breaks or shatters when subjected to stress).
One example of a brittle nonconducting solid at 25 degrees Celsius is sulfur.
Brittle solid
Sodium chloride is a brittle solid.
Chlorine itself is not a solid material, it is a gas at room temperature. It is not considered to have a brittle property since it does not have a defined solid structure.
No. Helium is a gas, not a solid.
sulphur
i dont know sorry No. It is characterized by stiffness.
Potassium iodide is a brittle crystalline solid at room temperature.
A yellow brittle solid is most likely a non-metal. Metals are typically solid at room temperature, but they are usually malleable and ductile, rather than brittle. Non-metals, on the other hand, can be brittle in nature.
a nonmetal because a metal is shiny and strong so a nonmetal is brittle and dull
Fluorine is a gas at room temperature and does not exhibit typical solid state properties like brittleness. As a gas, fluorine is not arranged in a lattice structure like solid materials, so it does not have the same mechanical properties that would make it brittle.