In November 2009, Battery Park Realty lists a 2Br/2Ba, 1190sf unit for sale at $1.59M or $6,000/month to rent.
A 2 brdrm will probably start at around $2500. Check craigslist.
2Br is two separate bromine atoms. Br2 is a bromine molecule, consisting of two bromine atoms bonded together.
The redox reaction you provided is unbalanced. The correct balanced redox reaction should be 2Cl + Br2 -> 2Cl- + 2Br. This balanced equation ensures that both charge and mass are conserved during the reaction.
How do you draw and electron cloud for 2Br and for Br2
The bromine oxidizes iodide ions to produce iodine and bromide ions. The overall reaction is 2I- + Br2 → I2 + 2Br-.
The balanced equation for the combustion of bromine is 2Br₂ + O₂ → 2Br₂O. This equation shows that two molecules of bromine (Br₂) combine with one molecule of oxygen (O₂) to form two molecules of bromine oxide (Br₂O).
That no matter is lost during the reaction. That is why the number of atoms of a specific element on one side of the reaction is equal to the number of atoms on the other side. Na2S + 2HBr -------> 2NaBr + H2S #of atoms................ #of atoms 2Na..............................2Na 1S................................1S 2H............................... 2H 2Br.............................. 2Br
You would have to use a section 8 voucher for what it is specific for.
In the reaction between MnBr2 and Na2SO3 a precipitate (insoluble) compound is formed, and that is MnSO3. So, the net ionic equation is Mn^2+(aq) + SO3^2-(aq) ==> MnSO3(s). The other ions (2Na^2+ and 2Br^-) are spectator ions.
The net ionic equation for barium hydroxide (Ba(OH)2) plus hydrobromic acid (HBr) is Ba(OH)2 + 2H+ + 2Br- -> Ba2+ + 2Br- + 2H2O. This equation highlights the formation of barium ions (Ba2+) and water molecules (H2O) as the only significant species in the reaction.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between chlorine (Cl2) and bromine (Br2) is: Cl2 + Br2 -> 2ClBr
The dissociation equation for mercury(II) bromide (HgBr2) in water is: HgBr2(s) -> Hg2+(aq) + 2Br-(aq)