Boiling point: the temperature when vapours of the material are formed.
The freezing and boiling points of metals vary depending on the specific metal. For example, the freezing point of iron is around 1,538°C and the boiling point is about 2,861°C. Metals generally have high melting and boiling points compared to non-metals due to their metallic bonding.
Gallium has a boiling point of 93°ish F. But mercury is way lower than that. It's a liquid at room temperature.
Generally, an alloy has a higher boiling point than a pure metal due to the presence of different elements in the alloy that can form stronger bonds and interactions, increasing the overall boiling point of the material.
Mercury. Boiling point 629.88 K, 356.73 °C Melting point 234.32 K, -38.83 °C
Chromium is a metal and metals tend to have high boiling points.
Metal can boil. Highest metal boiling point is tungsten.The boiling point of Tungsten (W) is 5,828 K, 5,555 °C or 10,031 °F
Mercury Hg -38.8' Now you could consider Hydrogen to be a metal if you are willing to get creative with the definition of metal. In that case it would be −259.16 °C
The boiling point of iron is 2 862 0C.
Rose's metal is a fusible alloy and thus does not have a boiling point. Its melting point however is between 200 and 208 degrees Fahrenheit.
sodium has a very high boiling point, in fact it's 883 °C
The freezing and boiling points of metals vary depending on the specific metal. For example, the freezing point of iron is around 1,538°C and the boiling point is about 2,861°C. Metals generally have high melting and boiling points compared to non-metals due to their metallic bonding.
Gallium has a boiling point of 93°ish F. But mercury is way lower than that. It's a liquid at room temperature.
Melting (freezing) point: the temperature when the solid metal become a liquid. Boiling point: the temperature when the liquid metal become a gas.
It takes a lot of heat to turn this metal into a gas. The boiling point is 4265 °C or 7709 °F or 4538 K. A link can be found below.
It depends on the metal. Different metals have different boiling points.
Generally, an alloy has a higher boiling point than a pure metal due to the presence of different elements in the alloy that can form stronger bonds and interactions, increasing the overall boiling point of the material.
Mercury. Boiling point 629.88 K, 356.73 °C Melting point 234.32 K, -38.83 °C