you get it from a plant and when gathered they proccess it
bromine water is oxidising in nature. it removes the double bonds and attaches itself to the alkene.
Halogens are found in nature as a monatomic species ex. Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Flourine, Chlorine, Bromine, ect.
No, the chemical properties of calcium and bromine are not similar. The melting point for Calcium is 8390C, bromine's is -7.250C. Calcium's boiling point is 1484°C, bromine's is 58.750C. etc. Calcium is a silvery white, soft alkaline earth metal. Although none of the alkaline earths occur free in nature, calcium compounds are abundant. Bromine is a reddish-brown liquid, and it has a metallic luster in solid form.
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 is a liquid but doesn't occur in nature as a free element.
no bromine can't be found naturally :)
Bromine is a liquid but doesn't occur in nature as a free element.
Only mercury is a chemical element which occur in the nature as a liquid.
Bromine is obtained by oxidising naturally occuring bromides with chlorine gas. This approach exploits the fact that chlorine is more reactive than bromine.
It is found in nature in the form of Bromide salts
bromine water is oxidising in nature. it removes the double bonds and attaches itself to the alkene.
No, bromine exists in nature. It is common in seawater, and in underground aquifers that have been exposed to seawater in the "recent" past.
Bromine and Mercury
Yes, bromine is naturally occurring element. It is possible with technological advancement in the field of chemistry that scientists are now able to synthesize bromine in laboratory. Bromine gives M+2 peak in FT-IR.
Question as posed makes no sense. Free? In nature? If so, no.
In the United States, Iodine was replaced with Bromine forty years ago. Although similar, Bromine does not count toward your daily Iodine requirments.