Yes
Chlorine doesn't explode when mixed with water. Pool water has chlorine in it. I think you meant sodium mixed with water, which does explode.
Bromine water and NaCl mixed together appears colourless. The only condition which there is a colour is when the bromine water is old (bromine water is basically rum), but under normal conditions, the mixture ought to be colourless.
chlorine gas
Bromine is an additive that you put in a pool to sanitize the water. Chlorine is an additive that you put in a pool to sanitize the water. Salt is added to some pools to allow it to be converted electronically to chlorine with a salt water chlorinator.
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.
Chlorine doesn't explode when mixed with water. Pool water has chlorine in it. I think you meant sodium mixed with water, which does explode.
Bromine water and NaCl mixed together appears colourless. The only condition which there is a colour is when the bromine water is old (bromine water is basically rum), but under normal conditions, the mixture ought to be colourless.
chlorine gas
Bromine is an additive that you put in a pool to sanitize the water. Chlorine is an additive that you put in a pool to sanitize the water. Salt is added to some pools to allow it to be converted electronically to chlorine with a salt water chlorinator.
Bromine is salt mixed with water so when you put it in water its just more water with salt in :)
Chlorine is used to kill harmful pathogens in the treated sewage before discharge to a receiving watercourse. This is similar to its use in swimming pools. Similar treatment can be provided by using bromine, ozone or ultraviolet light.
Chlorine/Bromine chemicals added to the water.
Flowers or plants can not live in chlorine treated water. This is because the chlorine chemicals shutdown the organelles of the plants cells.
Chlorine will displace bromine from NaBr
0.2ppm
If you have a salt water hot tub or pool, you shouldn't need to add any extra chlorine. I am the pool operator at our local YMCA and we have a salt system with a Chloromatic chlorine generating cell. Rarely do we add any extra chlorine, only in cases of decontamination and/or shocking. Bromine does do better than chlorine in higher temps.
When D- glucose is treated with bromine water - it oxides the terminal aldehyde to carboxylic acid and the major product is gluconic acid.