Bromine is a liquid at room temperature
Liquid = Bromine Solid = Solid Bromine Gas = Bromine vapor
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
That will be Bromine. Assuming that the question asks which metal is liquid at room temperature, the answer is Mercury. Interestingly, the chemical formula, Hg, derives from the Greek for Runny Silver. As the question specifically states non metal, I didn't include mercury as that is indeed a metal
Yes, a Bromine atom can bond to another similar Bromine atom, to make a Bromine molecule: Br2
solid, liquid, gas
Liquid = Bromine Solid = Solid Bromine Gas = Bromine vapor
In science, the term states is synonymous with phases. Solid, liquid, and gas, can be described as phases or as states.
-1 = in Bromides 0 = in Br2 +1 = in Hypobromites +3 = in Bromine trichloride +5 = in Bromates +7 = in Perbromates
Solid, Liquid, Gas, and Plasma.
gas
States of matter: gas, liquid, solid and if you want plasma. Phases of matter are the same but the word phase has and an another meaning for crystalline materials.
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
In the United States, Iodine was replaced with Bromine forty years ago. Although similar, Bromine does not count toward your daily Iodine requirments.
Sounds like bromine. (It actually is.) Bromine is also volatile. A link is provided below.Yes that is correct but say if this quest was in an exam, you wouldn't write that.The answer is Bromine because the question clearly states, at room temperature this halogen is a liquid,and on any periodic table, bromine is a different colour to the other elements showing that it is a liquid or it melts close to room temperature. Bromine, Mercury, Gallium, Ceasium and Francium are all the same colour as each other. Also, yes. Bromine is volatile.Hope this helps! :)
Liquid, gas and solid.