For example silver bromide, AgBr.
Some examples of insoluble bromide compounds include silver bromide (AgBr), lead(II) bromide (PbBr2), and Mercury(I) bromide (Hg2Br2). These compounds do not dissolve easily in water and form solid precipitates when bromide ions are combined with the corresponding metal ions.
Nickel(II) bromide is soluble in water.
Many organic compounds are insoluble in water. They have carbon and hydrogen as elements.
lead2chloride
Rule 5
CH4 is not polar.So it is in soluble in polar compounds
Nickel(II) bromide is soluble in water.
no, it is soluble in water
Silver bromide is insoluble in water and don't react with sodium nitrate.
Many organic compounds are insoluble in water. They have carbon and hydrogen as elements.
Not really. Lead bromide's solubility in water is so low that it is generally considered to be insoluble.
solubility table
Magnesium Bromide
Potassium Bromide : KBr
lead2chloride
phosphates
There are many compounds. Basic compounds are commonly not.
The terms "metal" and "nonmetal" are normally applied to elements, not compounds such as silver bromide.