Yes, LiF2 (lithium fluoride) is a solid at room temperature and pressure. It is a white crystalline compound with a high melting point of 845 degrees Celsius.
It could be both! In order for ice cream to be a sold, it must be 0 Degrees C, at a minimum. (0 Degrees C = 32 Degrees F) This turns it from its liquid state to its solid state. However, you can lower the temperature of the solid ice cream further to 0 Degrees F in a commercial freezer.
The eutectic point temperature of water is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. At this temperature, water transitions directly between solid ice and liquid water without any change in temperature.
Bromine, group 17; Mercury, group 12. Both are liquids at STP
Mercury oxide can exist in both solid and liquid states. At room temperature, it is typically found in a solid state.
One example of a substance that is solid at both room temperature and 200 degrees Celsius is gold. Gold has a high melting point of 1064 degrees Celsius, so it remains solid at both room temperature and 200 degrees Celsius.
AnswerMercury only becomes solid at temperatures below 37.89 degrees Fahrenheit Mercury becomes a liquid at room temperature.Mercury is very weird. It attaches to metal, but bends over plastic. It is poisonous if used wrong. It is used in thermometers.
Yes, LiF2 (lithium fluoride) is a solid at room temperature and pressure. It is a white crystalline compound with a high melting point of 845 degrees Celsius.
It could be either. Solid, liquid, and gas are different phases of matter and both compounds and elements are matter and can be in any of those phases depending on temperature and pressure.
It could be both! In order for ice cream to be a sold, it must be 0 Degrees C, at a minimum. (0 Degrees C = 32 Degrees F) This turns it from its liquid state to its solid state. However, you can lower the temperature of the solid ice cream further to 0 Degrees F in a commercial freezer.
The eutectic point temperature of water is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. At this temperature, water transitions directly between solid ice and liquid water without any change in temperature.
At 21 degrees Celsius, chlorine is a gas.
Sucrose can be both solid or liquid. At room temperature, however, it's a solid.
Water both in the solid (ice) and liquid (water) state, can undergo evaporation when at any temperature. At STP water boils at 100 degrees C.
No, they are both gasses.
Yes. PbCl2 is a white solid, but it has a relatively low melting point for a metallic salt - just 501 degrees C as opposed to 801 degrees C for common salt sodium chloride or 786 degrees C for potassium chloride, or 772 degrees C for calcium chloride.
A solid can be either a compound or an element. A compound is a substance made of two or more elements chemically combined, like salt (sodium chloride). An element, on the other hand, is a substance made of only one type of atom, like iron or oxygen.