Fluorine has probable a natural radioactive isotope (F-18) but only as traces.
Chlorine has a natural radioactive isotope (Cl-36) but only as traces.
Bromine hasn't natural radioactive isotopes.
Iodine has probable a natural radioactive isotope (I-125) but only as traces.
Astatine has only radioactive isotopes.
No isotopes of bromine ordinarily found in nature are radioactive. Like all elements, radioactive synthetic isotopes of bromine exist.
Bromine is an element that has two naturally occurring isotopes.
Bromine has two stable isotopes and twenty-nine unstable ones.
It is highly reactive especially with elements in Group 1 (alkaline metals) because they only need one more electron to become "complete".
All of them are non metals. There is a one radioactive halogen. Tat one is actinide halogen.
No, bromine is not radioactive.
Yes it is
Radon gas.
yes it is
The isotope of bromine called 81-bromine. Since the element you are describing has 35 electrons, it must also have 35 protons. Therefore you end up with bromine which is the 35th element (since the amount of protons are equal to the elements number). Adding 46 to 35 gives you the weight of the specific bromine isotope, since the weight of the element is also the name of the isotope. It is also not radioactive.
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Liquid = Bromine Solid = Solid Bromine Gas = Bromine vapor
Yes, a Bromine atom can bond to another similar Bromine atom, to make a Bromine molecule: Br2
Bromine (Br) is a liquid Iodine (I) is a solid
This is the radioactive isotope bromine-78.
The isotope of bromine called 81-bromine. Since the element you are describing has 35 electrons, it must also have 35 protons. Therefore you end up with bromine which is the 35th element (since the amount of protons are equal to the elements number). Adding 46 to 35 gives you the weight of the specific bromine isotope, since the weight of the element is also the name of the isotope. It is also not radioactive.
Bromine has only 2 stable isotopes(isotopes which do not undergo radioactive decay), whereas mercury has 7 stable isotopes. Mercury is a heavy weight metal, whereas bromine isn't exactly jusy as heavy. Mercury's atomic weight is200.59, which is heavier than bromines atomic weight of 79.904. Bromine has a strong bleachong action and smells of chlorine whileis obtained mainly from cinnabar, and is toxic to breath or ingest. While bromine does react quite fairly to most acids, mercury does not react with most of the acids known and tested. both of these metals belong to two entirely different groups. One similarity that these two fluid metals share is that they are liquid metals.
bromine <><><><><> Halogens are group 17 elements, like fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, astatine, and uus-117.
About 33 hours
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Bromine Pentachloride is the name of BrCI5.
Bromine is bromine no matter how toxic
This is the radioactive isotope bromine-78.
Liquid = Bromine Solid = Solid Bromine Gas = Bromine vapor