The solution will turn the orange bromine water into a colourless solution
it goes from a browny orange to colourless
i don't think that any change occurs, it remains the same
by adding bromine water to the compound. if it is unsaturated, the red colour of the bromine water will fade quickly. if it is saturated, then it will not fade.
Combustion of ethene produces carbon dioxide and water.
Bromine water is a dilute solution of bromine that is normally orange-brown in colour, but becomes colourless when shaken with an alkene. Alkenes can decolourise bromine water, while alkanes cannot.
it goes from a browny orange to colourless
As polyehtene is unsaturated(single bond) it does not react with bromine and there is no colour change.But bromine reacts with ethene and it becomes colourless.
The ethene doesnt change from orange to colourless as ethene is already colourless but the bromine water turns from orange to colourless.
i don't think that any change occurs, it remains the same
Ethene can react with Bromine water - turns colourless
It will turn colorless because bromine is an unsaturated compound and unsaturated compound have double bonds
by adding bromine water to the compound. if it is unsaturated, the red colour of the bromine water will fade quickly. if it is saturated, then it will not fade.
Yes, however it doesn't require it either to react. ethene+bromine water→1,2-dibromoethane Ethane reacts with bromine only in the presence of UV forming bromoethane and hydrogen bromide.
it turns to bacon :)
Combustion of ethene produces carbon dioxide and water.
i think the unsaturated fat decolourises it :/
tribromophenol is formed.