Bromine is the only liquid nonmetallic element at room temperature. It is a heavy, mobile, reddish-brown liquid, that evaporates easily at standard temperature and pressures in a red vapor (its color resembles nitrogen dioxide) that has a strong disagreeable odor. A halogen, bromine resembles chlorine chemically but is less active (it is more active than iodine however). Bromine is very soluble in water or carbon disulfide (forming a red solution). It bonds easily with many elements and has a strong bleaching action.
Physical properties of Bromine
Phase : Liquid
Density : 3.1028 g cm-3
Melting point : 265.8 K
Boiling point : 332.0 K
Critical point : 588 K ; 10.34 MPa
Heat of fusion : 10.571 kj mol-1
Heat of vaporisation : 29.96 kj mol-1
Specific heat capacity : 75.69 J mol-1 K-1
A volatile red -brown liquid that is very reactive with most metals. It is toxic and corrosive and will cause damage to skin, flesh and nerve endings. It is too reactive to be found free in nature. Brominated compounds are often use a flame retardent.
What are the Chemical Properties of Bromine?
Bromine is used to coat photographic compounds.
It is a liquid at room and Red in colour
Fluorine because it is in the same group (group 17) as Bromine therefore it has the same chemical properties
At this temperature bromine is a liquid.
Bromine at -100 oC is a solid.
Bromine at -100 oC is a solid.
Liquid at Room
Bromine is an element. It has both physical and chemial properties
Bromine is an element. It has both physical and chemial properties
bromine,chlorine and iodine do not have the same physical properties like chlorine is a greenish yellow gas,bromine is brown and iodine is purple liquid so generally they do not have the same physical properties.
It is red in colour, and a liquid at room temperature
Sodium and bromine are chemical elements, not properties; the chemical reaction between sodium and bromine is a chemical process, not a property.
Fluorine and other elements that are in group 17. A cool site is chemicool.com
No, Bromine does not have malleable properties as it is not a Metal
The color of an element is a PHYSICAL property, not a chemical property.
The same? No. Similar? yes, Flourine, Bromine, Iodine. See "HALOGENS"
Fluorine because it is in the same group (group 17) as Bromine therefore it has the same chemical properties
bromine............
Bromine at -100 oC is a solid.