Liquid = Bromine Solid = Solid Bromine Gas = Bromine vapor
Bromine is a liquid, so chlorine, as a gas, will diffuse faster.
Any element can be a gas in the right conditions. However, at STP chlorine is a gas while bromine is a liquid.
No it is a liquid but there is some vapor above the liquid surface.
qwertyu
Bromine is a halogen which can be a gas or liquid depending on the temperature. At room temperature bromine is a liquid metal.
Bromine is both a liquid and a gas at room temperature. It also depends on the volume it is placed in, there will be more visible gas when less compacted and visa versa.
Bromine is a liquid at room temperature, but after 58,8 0C bromine become a gas.
Liquid = Bromine Solid = Solid Bromine Gas = Bromine vapor
liquid
Liquid
Bromine is a liquid, so chlorine, as a gas, will diffuse faster.
Bromine's melting point is -7.2 °C, so at -5 °C, bromine would be a liquid.
probably a gas, the melting point for bromine is -7 degrees celsius
Any element can be a gas in the right conditions. However, at STP chlorine is a gas while bromine is a liquid.
Bromine is a liquid at room temperature. The description of particles is of atoms in a liquid.
Bromine has only 2 stable isotopes(isotopes which do not undergo radioactive decay), whereas mercury has 7 stable isotopes. Mercury is a heavy weight metal, whereas bromine isn't exactly jusy as heavy. Mercury's atomic weight is200.59, which is heavier than bromines atomic weight of 79.904. Bromine has a strong bleachong action and smells of chlorine whileis obtained mainly from cinnabar, and is toxic to breath or ingest. While bromine does react quite fairly to most acids, mercury does not react with most of the acids known and tested. both of these metals belong to two entirely different groups. One similarity that these two fluid metals share is that they are liquid metals.