Chlorine is more reactive
Bromine is way more reactive
The most reactive halogen, and one of the most reactive of all the elements, is fluorine. Reactivity in the halogen family continues in order from most reactive to least reactive with chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
It isn't. Fluorine is more reactive. However, Chlorine is more reactive than Bromine, Iodine and Astatine. It is all to do with molecular size. Fluorine wants to get to a stable 10 electrons to be like Neon more than Chlorine wants to get to get 18 lectrons to be like Argon. This is because the valence/bonding electrons are closer to the nucleus in Fluorine than they are Chlorine and thus more strongly attracted.
Francium is considered more reactive than Chlorine.
Bromine has more nuclear charge as compared to iodine. So, bromine easily attracts an electron and hence more reactive.
Chlorine
In most cases, chlorine is more reactive than bromine. This occurs because chlorine has a higher electronegativity than bromine. Thus, chlorine tends to take electrons from other substances more readily than bromine, and thus is more reactive.
Chlorine is more reactive than bromine thus bromine is unable to displace chlorine to form potassium bromide.
Bromine is obtained by oxidising naturally occuring bromides with chlorine gas. This approach exploits the fact that chlorine is more reactive than bromine.
Something more reactive than bromine. Chlorine or fluorine would do it.
Yes. Chlorine is more reactive than bromine.
Bromine is way more reactive
Chlorine displaces bromine as it is more reactive, and it creates sodium chloride aqueous and bromine aqueous.
slicon of course
The most reactive halogen, and one of the most reactive of all the elements, is fluorine. Reactivity in the halogen family continues in order from most reactive to least reactive with chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
Fluorine Chlorine Iodine Bromine Astatine
Francium is considered more reactive than Chlorine.