Bromine was discovered independently by two people, Carl Löwig and Antoine Balard. Löwig extracted the element from mineral water, Balard from seaweed ash. For more detail, I invite you to see the bromine page on wikipedia.
Elemental bromine was discovered in 1826, by German and French scientists working independently. Important quantities of bromine were not isolated until 1860. Bromine was named from the Greek word bromos which means stench, a reference to its very strong odor.
German and French scientists independently studied bromine, but the element was found in Germany
Antoine Balard discovered bromine using sea weed from the salt marshes of Montpellier, France in 1825. The ash of the sea weed was used to produced bromide chemicals and he distilled bromine from some chlorine saturated sea weed. Carl Jacob Löwig also discovered bromine in Germany during 1825 by extracting it from a solution of mineral salt from a spring and chlorine. The publication of his results was delayed and Balard's were published first.
Bromine is a halogen element, therefore it's nonmetallic.
Bromine is a liquid at Room, but it give out some bromine vapor
Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br2)
Bromine, symbol Br, atomic number 35, was discovered in 1826.
1825
Bromine was first discovered in 1826 by the French chemist Antoine Balard. It was isolated from seawater and identified as a new element with distinct properties.
Bromine was discovered by A.J. Balardin in 1826 A.D. by the action of the hlorine on certain residues (ex. Bromide Salts)
Discovered by Balard in 1826, but not prepared in quantity until 1860.
German and French scientists independently studied bromine, but the element was found in Germany
Antoine Balard discovered bromine using sea weed from the salt marshes of Montpellier, France in 1825. The ash of the sea weed was used to produced bromide chemicals and he distilled bromine from some chlorine saturated sea weed. Carl Jacob Löwig also discovered bromine in Germany during 1825 by extracting it from a solution of mineral salt from a spring and chlorine. The publication of his results was delayed and Balard's were published first.
Carl Lowig was one of two people who discovered Bromine in 1826. The other person is Antoine J. Balard, a French chemist.
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Bromine water is a solution of bromine in water, typically used as a reagent in chemical reactions to test for unsaturation in organic compounds. Liquid bromine is the pure elemental form of bromine, which is a dark red-brown liquid at room temperature and is highly reactive.
Bromine Pentachloride is the name of BrCI5.
Bromine is bromine no matter how toxic