A liquid compound that vaporizes readily at room temperature is called a volatile liquid. An example of this would be gasoline or rubbing alcohol
Molecular Compound.
Dohso
Water leaking from a furnace most likely occurs from the heat of the furnace which transforms into a liquid. The best way to avoid the leak is to put your furnace at a lower temperature.
It's possible. I'd be wary assuming this is the problem. If you can replace with an identical thermal fuse and test, I would. It is very likely you have an overheating issue, though. Clean whatever the fuse is meant to protect thoroughly. If this is in a light fixture, i would be tempted to replace with a lower energy light bulb.
It sounds more like a water heater issue, more than likely you are heating your water with a boiler and there are either coil cleaning or, control issues.
If the filament really was made from a material that has a negative temperature coefficient (as temperature increases, resistance decreases) then the decreasing resistance would cause more and more current to be taken as the lamp heated up and the temperature would get higher and higher in a runaway manner until either the power supply's breaker would trip or (more likely) the light bulb's filament would simply burn open. In fact the filament has to be made from a material that has a positive temperature coefficient. (As temperature increases, resistance increases.) Then, as the bulb's temperature rises, its filament's increasing resistance causes less current to be taken than when it was cold. Quite quickly a stable "steady-state" temperature and "running" resistance is reached so that the bulb simply continues to give out a steady amount of light according to the current it is taking from the electricity supply.
When dc motor run full torque at low speed. Armature current is high and field current is set to max to get the torque. When motor is field weaken then temperature decrease at same cooling air flow
Chlorine will readily accept one electron to its outershell.
The compound you describe would most likely be a gas at a room temperature of about 26 degrees Celsius, given that the compound is at a standard pressure of 1 atmosphere as well. If you specify the compound, or the pressure at which it melts rather than just temperature; one could provide a better and more precise answer, but with your information I have provided my best assumption.
The single "most likely" element that would form an ionic compound with fluorine is cesium, or possibly francium if enough of it could be collected. This is because cesium, among stable elements, has the lowest electronegativity and fluorine has the highest electronegativity. However, any alkali or alkaline earth metal element in fact readily forms an ionic compound with fluorine, as do many other metals.
If the only reactant is a binary compound, the products are most likely to be the two elements composing the compound.
A non polar compound would be least likely to dissolve in water.
Fish, chicken.
Likely does not form a compound.
Technically it is possible but it complicated and most likely expensive. Graphics cards are not made to be readily switched in laptops so the entire laptop would need to be disassembled and things like thermal compound (used on heatsinks) would need to be reapplied. It is most likely not worth the hassle.
The physical state is based on the Intermolecular forces (IMF). Many organic compounds are non polar and have weak IMF's. They would likely be a gas. If the compound is polar, it would likely be a liquid.
The physical state is based on the Intermolecular forces (IMF). Many organic compounds are non polar and have weak IMF's. They would likely be a gas. If the compound is polar, it would likely be a liquid.
an enzyme
The products will be the components of this binary compound.