it blows up. Talibans mix the two in bottles. When they are moved or shook when someone treds ont hem, boom.
all the skin falls of :) (true)
When hydrochloric acid is added to a mixture of bromine and water, bromine will react with hydrochloric acid to form hydrogen bromide and hypobromous acid. This reaction can then proceed further to form bromine chloride and bromine, depending on the conditions present.
Bromine is an element by itself, it does not form anything (besides bromine) until you add it with another element to form a compound.
When chlorine is added to a solution containing bromine ions, the chlorine will react with the bromine ions to form a mixture of chlorine and bromine compounds, such as bromine chloride. This reaction is a redox reaction where chlorine is reduced and bromine is oxidized.
tear gas
In the reaction, bromine gains an electron and forms a bromide ion (Br-). This results in a decrease in the oxidation state of the bromine atom from 0 to -1.
When bromine water is added to oil, if the oil contains unsaturated bonds, the reddish-brown color of the bromine water will be reduced as the bromine molecules add across the double bonds in a chemical reaction called bromination. This reaction is used to test for the presence of unsaturation in organic compounds like alkenes or alkynes.
When acetylene is bubbled through bromine water, the unsaturated acetylene undergoes a reaction with bromine (a halogen) to form a dihalogenated compound, bromoethylene. This reaction is an addition reaction where two bromine atoms add across the carbon-carbon triple bond in acetylene to form the product. The bromine water, which is originally orange-brown in color, will decolorize as the reaction proceeds.
When bromine is added to water, it reacts to form hypobromous acid (HBrO) and hydrobromic acid (HBr). This can further dissociate to form bromide ions (Br-) and hypobromite ions (OBr-). The overall reaction can be summarized as follows: Br2 + H2O → HBrO + HBr
tribromophenol is formed.
holaaa lala
The redish brown bromine color disappears by the addition of bromine to double bond.Br2 + H2C==CH-(CH2)n-CH3 ----> H2C(Br)--CH(Br)-(CH2)n-CH31-alkene ----> 1,2-dibroom-alkane