Bismuth is a solid metal at room temperature.
Mercury(Hg) and Aluminum(Al) form a mercury amalgam at room temperature
If it were a solid at room temperature, then that would be the state of matter. However, hydrogen is NOT solid at room temperature. It is a gas and that would be the state of matter.
I believe that at room temperature, Carbon resides in the state of Minnesota.
Mercury is normally found in a liquid state at room temperature. It is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature.
Menthol is a solid at room temperature.
At standard temperature and pressure, with a temperature of 25 C specified, bismuth is a solid. If the "room" is in a hot country and not artificially cooled, the bismuth might well be liquid instead.
BTW, it's a solid, normal phase means state of matter
Not all of them. Mercury is liquid at room temperature. Bismuth and lead melt at relatively low temperatures.
Terbium melts at 1629 Kelvins. Therefore, it is solid at room temperature.
Germanium at room temperature is in the state of a Solid
The state of silicon at room temperature is SOLID State.
Hydrogen's physical state at room temperature is a gas.
Mercury, apparently Bismuth has the lowest thermal condctivity of metals that are solid at room temperature.
The compound Bi2Te3 is called bismuth telluride. It is a binary compound composed of bismuth and tellurium atoms in a 2:3 ratio. It is a well-known thermoelectric material with high efficiency at room temperature.
solid at room temperature
solid at room temperature
Mercury(Hg) and Aluminum(Al) form a mercury amalgam at room temperature