The bromide ion always has a 1- charge.
the charge of the bromide ion in AlBr3 is -1
The charge that bromine forms in compounds is -1. This is because it is a type of halogen that takes electrons to fill its outer shell.
potassium bromide + fluorine --> potassium fluoride + bromide
potassium
The chemical formula is CsBr since Cesium takes a +1 ion charge while Bromide takes a -1 ion charge so they cancel each other out and you are left with CsBr.
The charge of Bromine would be -1.
The bromide ion has a 1- charge.
potassium positive bromine negative
A bromide ion has a charge of -1.
Potassium.
the charge of the bromide ion in AlBr3 is -1
ions charge around £20
I'm not 100% sure but potassium bromide is only need one negative bromide ion therefore since potassium is positive one I'm guessing bromide is negative oneThe Bomide ion is Br-.Bromine has 7 electrons in its outer shell and takes on one extra electron to give it a noble gas configuration.
Bromine forms anion. It gets a charge of -1 to form bromide ion.
K+
Oxygen is transferred from bromate ion(s) to the Chromium ion. Leaving hypobromous ion, and/ or bromide ion.
Potassium is a group 1 element, so it will form a 1+ ion.