Here s a nice site with a list.
Two elements liquid at room temperature.
Each of the 13 elements has their own unique physical and chemical properties.
While a number are gases are only two elements are liquid at room temperature.
Elements that are liquid at 25 c.
The previous answer concerned common metals.
It is the third lightest halogen and is a fuming red brown liquid at room temperature that evaporates readily to form a similarly coloured gas.
There are two elements that are liquid at the temperature technically designated room temperature or 298 k 25 c and a total of six elements that can be liquids at actual room temperatures and pressures.
Elements that are liquid at 25 c.
They are nonreactive mono atomic elements with extremely low boiling points.
Radon helium xenon neon krypton and argon are eight noble gases.
Room temperature is a loosely defined term that can mean anywhere from 20 c to 29 c.
Point at or click an element in the periodic table for more information.
Mercury with a melting point of minus 38 83 c 234 32 k minus 7 89 f and a boiling point of 356 73c 629 88 k 674 11 f is the most well known of these.
In the periodic table above black squares indicate elements which are solids at room temperature about 22ºc those in blue squares are liquids at room temperature and those in red squares are gases at room temperature.
These two are mercury and bromine.
Bromine is a chemical element with the symbol br and atomic number 35.
Its properties are thus intermediate between those of chlorine and iodine isolated independently by two chemists carl jacob löwig in 1825 and antoine jérôme balard in 1826.
Mercury hg and bromine br are the only elements in the periodic table that are liquids at room temperature.
Bromine is liquid at room temperature.
Most of the metals are solids under ordinary conditions i e 25ºc 1 atmosphere of pressure etc with the exception of mercury hg element 80 which solidifies.
For science it s usually considered to be either 20 c or 25 c.
Room temperature is a loosely defined term that can mean anywhere from 20 c to 29 c.
By this definition bromine and mercury are the only two elements that are liquid at room temperature.
At this temperature and ordinary pressure only two elements are liquids.
Actually gallium liquifies just above ordinary room temperature.