All four carbon bromides (mono-, di-, tri- and tetra-Bromomethane) are insoluble or immiscible with water.
Calcium bromide is extremely soluble in water.
Yes, barium bromide is soluble in water. When it dissolves in water, it dissociates into barium ions (Ba2+) and bromide ions (Br-), resulting in a clear solution.
Calcium Bromide, CaBr2, is a soluble salt.
Yes, ammonium bromide (NH4Br) is soluble in water.
Nickel(II) bromide is soluble in water.
Sodium Bromide is of course very soluble in water. In fact 116 grams of NaBr will dissolve in 100 cc of H2O at 50 degrees C.
Nickel bromide is soluble in water. It readily dissolves in water to form a clear, colorless solution.
Yes, copper II bromide is soluble in water. It forms a blue-green solution when dissolved in water.
Yes, magnesium bromide (MgBr2) is soluble in water. It forms a colorless to pale-yellow solution when dissolved in water.
Yes, potassium bromide is soluble in chloroform. As a polar compound, potassium bromide is soluble in polar solvents like water as well as nonpolar solvents like chloroform.
Yes, most bromides are water soluble. Bromide salts, such as sodium bromide and potassium bromide, dissolve readily in water due to their ionic nature. However, there are some organic bromides that are not soluble in water due to being nonpolar in nature.
There is no such thing as carbon trioxide. There is the carbonate ion (CO32-). Most carbonates are insoluble in water. There is also carbon dioxide (CO2) which is somewhat soluble in water.