Two elements in copper bromide (misspelled, not bromiNe)
There is Cu (cuprum) and Br(bromium) in it.
Sodium and bromine are the elements in sodium bromide (NaBr) compound.
It is Copper(II) bromide = CuBr2
Bromine is its own element. No other elements creare it. it is entirely its own thing
Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br) are two elements that are liquid at room temperature.
Yes. Bromine and mercury are the only 2 elements that exist as liquids at room temperature (25oC). However, there 4 other elements that exist as liquids at temperatures slighty above room temperature: * Francium at 27oC * Cesium at 28.6oC * Gallium at 30.3oC * Rubidium at 39.5oC
There are two atoms of Bromine (Br) and one atom of Copper (Cu) in this compound. Thus, there are two elements, but three atoms.
copper 2 bromine is not a chemical name. copper and bromine are both elements. the term "copper 2" suggests divalent copper, ie copper in the Cu++ state. Bromine is almost always a monovalent anion, ie Br-. Copper bromide is then one copper ion and two bromine ions together forming CuBr2.
Sodium and bromine are the elements in sodium bromide (NaBr) compound.
they are all in the same period and they all have the same valance number (+2)
Because they have the same valence number (+2)
The majority of chemical elements can be combined with bromine.
Because copper is considered an element, and because elements do not include other elements, copper only contains copper.
they are all in the same period in the periodic table, they all have the same valance number
It is Copper(II) bromide = CuBr2
There are two elements that are liquid always. They are bromine and mercury
Mercury and bromine are the 2 liquid elements. Bromine stays as Br2.
Bromine is a member of the halogen family of elements. Its companions include fluorine, chlorine, and iodine. Like the other halogens, bromine has seven electrons in its outer shell and is very reactive. You will find bromine in many salt compounds with alkali metals. Sodium bromide is a compound found in seawater. As with all reactive elements, bromine is never found alone in nature. It is always a part of a compound with other elements. Source: Chem4kids