You think probable to sodium chloride and bromide.
Halogens F (fluorine), Cl (chlorine), Br (bromine), I (iodine), At (astatine)
To answer you question HgBr2 is soluble in water. I had the same question so I surfed around a bit and found the answer on a chemistry based website talking about solublity and net ionic equations. Hope this helps~
K :- potassiumCl:- ChlorineO:- OxygenBr:- Bromine
NaCl------------>Na+ + Cl-
soluble
For sodium and potassium bromide is more soluble than chloride.
Br-I
Br-I
KBr, Potassium Bromide
chlorine (Cl)
S-Cl
p-br
You think probable to sodium chloride and bromide.
yes it is since it more electronegative than Br
the ions of Cl and Br both are negative 1. this means Cl and Br need one more electron to obtain a full shell. to complete their shells, Cl and Br form a covalent bond. also, Cl and Br are both nonmetals. 2 nonmetals cam only form a covalent bond.
.....Cl Br-C-Cl ....Br Single Bonds for all and 3 pairs of unbonded electrons on both Cl's and both Br's