Yes, AgBr is insoluble in water.
You can use the Ksp (the solubility product) to determine the solubility.
Ksp = 5.0 x 10^-13 and the equilibrium equation is AgBr(s) Ag+ + Br-
This video explains it in great detail:
www . khanacademy.org/science/chemistry/acid-base-equilibrium/copy-of-solubility-equilibria-mcat/v/solubility-from-the-solubility-product-constant
Nope! It's insoluble
The reaction is: KBr + AgNO3 = KNO3 + AgBr The silver bromide is insoluble in water.
For example silver bromide, AgBr.
Silver bromide (AgBr), a soft, pale-yellow, water insoluble salt
Ksp of AgBr is 7.7 × 10−13
It is insoluble in water
Sand is insoluble in water.
PbI2 is insoluble in water.
Yes, oil is insoluble in water.
fats and oils are insoluble in water.
Sawdust is insoluble in water.
ZnCO3 is insoluble in water.
oils are insoluble in water
PbCl2 is insoluble in water.
Butane is insoluble in water because it is nonpolar.
Oils are insoluble in water because they are bases.
Fatty acids are insoluble in water.
All fluorides are insoluble in water!
AgBr AgBr
It insoluble because the compound contains the element carbon; which is insoluble in water.
All silver halides are insoluble. It has to do with the relatively low electronegativity difference between silver and bromine; also a concept called "Fajan's Rule," which says that silver's ionic radius is similar in size to halide ionic radii, meaning they can "snuggle up close" to each other, rendering them difficult to dissociate in water.
Insoluble. Metallic sulfides are very poorly soluble in water.
Lipids are nonpolar and insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol though.
Insoluble in water but soluble in oil