Uranium is considered non-volatile in its natural state. However, when it is processed and enriched for use in nuclear reactors or weapons, it can become volatile and pose a significant hazard if not handled properly.
No. A highly volatile substance is one that easily turns into vapor at or near room temperature. Glucose is quite stable as a solid.
Pure iodine at room temperature is a highly volatile solid.
No, volatile materials can exist as liquids or solids at low temperatures as well. The term "volatile" primarily refers to a substance's tendency to vaporize or evaporate quickly at normal temperatures. So, while volatile materials may often be gases that turn into liquids or solids at low temperatures, they can also exist in liquid or solid states initially.
A solid that can easily tranform into a gas.
SSD or Solid State Drive is a storage device containing non-volatile flash memory, it has no moving parts and has a much greater speed than a had drive
Uranium is considered non-volatile in its natural state. However, when it is processed and enriched for use in nuclear reactors or weapons, it can become volatile and pose a significant hazard if not handled properly.
a solid state drive is faster than an sata drive...
A normal hard drive consists of a disc that is constantly being written and overwritten, whereas a solid state drive consists of flash memory, like a USB drive. It has no moving parts and is all in one piece, therefore, solid state.
16 gb solid state drive holds 1/10th the capacity of a 160 gb hard drive. The solid state drive has no moving parts unlike a hard drive. Also the SSD has faster speeds than the HD
ATA and Solid State are two different things. ATA is a connector type with SATA being it's newer form. Solid State is a type of drive medium which the data is stored on. A typical Hard Drive uses spinning platters while a Solid State drive uses flash media with no moving parts.
A CD drive has moving parts and therefore cannot be considered solid state.
A USB flash drive is considered to have volatile memory. It is called volatile because it is easily changed or deleted.
is printer & DVD is volatile memory
Yes
A solid state disk (SSD) or a USB flash drive, either have no moving parts.
A 16 gigabyte solid-state drive and a 160 gigabyte hard drive vary based on how their data is stored. Solid-state drives use integrated circuit assemblies as memory. Hard drives use moving electromechanical magnetic disks to store data.