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.
i dont know sorry No. It is characterized by stiffness.
No. Helium is a gas, not a solid.
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.
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.
Brittle solid
Sodium chloride is a brittle solid.
i dont know sorry No. It is characterized by stiffness.
No. Helium is a gas, not a solid.
sulphur
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.
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.
Yes, solid nonmetals are generally brittle because their atomic and molecular structures make them less able to deform plastically when stressed. This means they are more likely to break or fracture when subjected to mechanical force.