The presence of excess bromine water will cause the pink color to disappear and it may be masked by the color of the reagent.
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
You will see Aqueous Bromine or Bromine water
Baeyer's test for unsaturation using KMnO4 . if the sol'n retains the purple color of the reagent , then it is an alkane. if the color disappears with formation of brown precipitate ,it indicates presence of unsaturated HC
The presence of excess bromine water will cause the pink color to disappear and it may be masked by the color of the reagent.
If this is supposed to be an alkene test, then no, hexane will not react with bromine water to take away its color as it is an alkane and therefore contains no double bonds. But bromine water will react with sodium hydroxide; bromine water contains either HCl or H2SO4, both of which will of course react with sodium hydroxide. In addition, I believe (from some experiments like this that I've done recently) that sodium hydroxide will actually react with the free bromine in the bromine water, as evidenced by the change in color from the orange-ish color of bromine water to a pale yellow.
Bromine water and NaCl mixed together appears colourless. The only condition which there is a colour is when the bromine water is old (bromine water is basically rum), but under normal conditions, the mixture ought to be colourless.
There is no colour change
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Kind of Red/Brown, or rust color, but vibrant.
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
You will see Aqueous Bromine or Bromine water
Baeyer's test for unsaturation using KMnO4 . if the sol'n retains the purple color of the reagent , then it is an alkane. if the color disappears with formation of brown precipitate ,it indicates presence of unsaturated HC
Bromine is a red liquid.
No. Water floats on top of bromine. Bromine's density is over three times that of water.
bromine water means the liquid formed by dissolving bromine in water. Br2.H2O From M.Swamy