Yes, tungsten is a metal.
This is from wikipedia
A steel-gray metal, tungsten is found in several ores, including wolframite and scheelite. It is remarkable for its robust physical properties, especially the fact that it has the highest melting point of all the non-alloyed metals and the second highest of all the elements after carbon.
Wolfram (W) or tungsten is a metal.
SolidTin is solid at room temperature.
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In the context of tungsten carbide, the solute is tungsten carbide itself (the solid compound of tungsten and carbon) and the solvent would be the medium in which tungsten carbide is dissolved, which is typically a liquid like cobalt or nickel in the case of cemented carbide materials.
Tungsten begins to vaporize at 5828 K, 5555 °C, 10031 °F
Tungsten's group or family is metals. NOT metalloids!! It is a solid. More common elements in this group are Cobalt, Iron, and Sodium. and i swear this is true. (:
Tungsten atoms evaporate from the filament of a bulb due to a process called sublimation, where solid tungsten directly turns into vapor without first becoming a liquid. This occurs because the filament of the bulb reaches extremely high temperatures during operation, causing the tungsten atoms to gain enough energy to break free from the solid structure and evaporate into the bulb's atmosphere.
It is a extremely durable metal but often mistaken as Tungsten Carbide. Tungsten Carbide is Tungsten ground to a powder with Carbon and compressed then nickel is heated and added as the binding agent or glue. The result is a very hard composition, but it is not a metal and it is not a solid. It is, however brittle. This means it is prone to chipping or cracking when Tungsten Carbide hits a hard surface.
At 20 0C titanium is a solid metal.
this elements is usually found in liquid form but some times in solid when frozen can also come alive and grow. Actually titanium is a solid not a liquid it is only a liquid at its melting point of 1668 Celsius . There is only two liquid metals mercury and bromium.
Tungsten has the highest melting point of all metals