i dont know (sorry)
Bromine is an element, a very very reactive element. At standard temperature and pressure it is a brown colored liquid, as seen in the center vial in the image above. However bromine is so reactive that you will never see it in its elemental form in daily life, it is most commonly is found in compounds called bromide salts.
No, methanol is not a bromine. Methanol is a type of alcohol compound with the chemical formula CH3OH, whereas bromine is a halogen element with the symbol Br. They are different substances with distinct chemical properties.
It would be nonpolar. But since it has two atoms of the same type it would be an element, not a compound.
No, a fire extinguisher is not an example of bromine. Fire extinguishers contain various agents, such as water, foam, dry chemicals, or carbon dioxide, depending on the type. Bromine is a chemical element and is not typically used as a fire suppression agent due to its corrosive nature and toxicity.
Nitrogen and bromine will form a covalent bond; they are both nonmetals.
The reaction is a single replacement reaction, also known as a displacement reaction. In this reaction, bromine replaces iodine in lithium iodide to form lithium bromide and free iodine.
Elements with only one type of atom: Mercury (Hg), Iron (Fe), Helium (He), oxygen (O or O2), bromine (Br or Br2) Elements with more than one type of atoms: Water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2)
No elements are found within other elements, which is how we define an element; As a substance consisting of one type of atom.
Of the listed items, water and carbon dioxide are compounds, not elements. The others (mercury, iron, helium, oxygen, carbon, and bromine) all have more than one isotope. So none of the listed materials have "one type of atom."
Bromine has a diatomic molecule, Br2.
metallic
A ionic bond is formed between cobalt and bromine.