OBr2 is polar. It is an angular shape (much like water) and the dipole moment vectors do not cancel each other out. Oxygen will be slightly negative while Bromine would be slightly positive
No,it is not polar.It is a non polar compound.
yes, looks like H2O. with 2 lone pairs. count Valence elec
Electronegativity of oxygen is 3.44. Electronegativity of chlorine is 3.16. While the valence electrons of carbon are not equally shared, COBr2 is polar.
Cobalt bromide is a polar compound.
Polar
It's polar.
CoBr2 is ionically bonded. This is because there is a metal (Co-cobalt) and a non metal (Br-bromine).
Cobalt Bromide
The molecular equation is 2KOH(aq) + CoBr2(aq) ==> 2KBr(aq) + Co(OH)2(s)The spectator ions are K^+ and Br^-
Cobalt(II) bromide Cobalt(II) bromide
It's polar.
CoBr2 is ionically bonded. This is because there is a metal (Co-cobalt) and a non metal (Br-bromine).
Cobalt Bromide
CoBr2
The molecular equation is 2KOH(aq) + CoBr2(aq) ==> 2KBr(aq) + Co(OH)2(s)The spectator ions are K^+ and Br^-
Cobalt(II) bromide Cobalt(II) bromide
Co2+ is an ion. But it will combine with any anion to form a compound as in CoCl2 or CoBr2.
nope, it cant ag is below co in d activity series chart
Most metal halides are water soluble, and cobalt (II) bromide is no exception.
No its not polar
It is a polar molecule and has polar bonds.
Polar contains polar. Non-polar contains nothing.