its chemestry
YES!!! 2Rb(s) + Br2(l) = 2RbBr(s) It is similar to the sodium / chlorine reaction, and compound.
"Table salt" contains sodium [Na] and chlorine [Cl] Many compounds containing the "halogens" [fluorine (F), chlorine (Cl), bromine (Br), iodine (I) and astatine (At)] are called "salts"
Bromine and Chlorine are gases.Sodium and sulphar are solid.Mercury is a liquid.All are reactive.Helium is the only inactive gas.
The balanced reaction between sodium and chlorine is as follows Na + Cl =>Na+ + Cl-. In this reaction, sodium loses an electron to sodium. Note that the products of this reaction are ions in the solid state.
Chlorine will displace bromine from NaBr
Chlorine displaces bromine as it is more reactive, and it creates sodium chloride aqueous and bromine aqueous.
chlorine (greatest), bromine, sodium, potassium (least)
You would get Sodium Chloride and Bromine. This is because Chlorine is a more reactive group 7, (halogen), element that bromine, we know this because it is above bromine in the periodic table group, it is therefore more electronegative. When the reaction occurs, the Chlorine displaces the Bromine and the solution turns brown.
no reaction
Flourine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, astatine
Sodium and bromine are chemical elements, not properties; the chemical reaction between sodium and bromine is a chemical process, not a property.
YES!!! 2Rb(s) + Br2(l) = 2RbBr(s) It is similar to the sodium / chlorine reaction, and compound.
The product of the synthesis reaction between sodium and chlorine gas is
"Table salt" contains sodium [Na] and chlorine [Cl] Many compounds containing the "halogens" [fluorine (F), chlorine (Cl), bromine (Br), iodine (I) and astatine (At)] are called "salts"
Bromine and Chlorine are gases.Sodium and sulphar are solid.Mercury is a liquid.All are reactive.Helium is the only inactive gas.
The balanced reaction between sodium and chlorine is as follows Na + Cl =>Na+ + Cl-. In this reaction, sodium loses an electron to sodium. Note that the products of this reaction are ions in the solid state.
Bromine will be reduced to bromide and it will oxidize Sodium thiosulfate to Sodium tetrathionate :2 Na2S2O3 + Br2 ----> Na2S4O6 + 2 NaBr