no it is not because the fumes might get to there heads and make them dosey
No , it stays brown it just dissolves it it doesn't react
Yes, a Bromine atom can bond to another similar Bromine atom, to make a Bromine molecule: Br2
Many types of glue fumes can make you sick or nauseous.
Yes, many people have died from the mixtures to make poison gas with bromine in war.
Very unstable material. Flammable in the form of vapor by chemical reaction with reducing agents. Potentially explosive if heated rapidly. A strong oxidant. Reaction with water, steam, or reducing materials produces toxic and corrosive fumes. Must be stored at low temperatures. When heated to decomposition it emits toxic fumes. It would need to be -122 degree Fahrenheit/-50 degree Celsius to make them mix safely. Thus, you don't make bromine dioxide in your home laboratory.
no it is not because the fumes might get to there heads and make them dosey
No , it stays brown it just dissolves it it doesn't react
because the lighting may dysfunction the chemicals and create a chemical reaction and or make toxic fumes.
Some glues emit toxic fumes that can be used to get high.
the fumes is the fumes that expose in the fumes that reqiured to make some fumes for fumes
fluorine, chlorine, bromine, all are coloured. fluorine is pale yellow, chlorine is greenish, and bromine is reddish brown. these three make up the first three halogens in the 7th group of the periodic table.
The answer is no I am a expert in controlled substances . But limit exposure because the fumes are toxic
It depends give it food and and water ( flower food ) make sure that there are no toxic fumes around it maybe a week or two it really depends
Yes, a Bromine atom can bond to another similar Bromine atom, to make a Bromine molecule: Br2
don't go there! Don't mix Clorox bleach with ANYTHING!! It creates very toxic fumes that will make you sick and could permanently injure your eyes
Zinc plus bromine makes a simple compound its zinc bromine