Sulfur dibromide
The bond between sulfur and bromine is covalent.
Sulfur Dibromide = SBr2
SCl6
Sulfur hexafluoride is a colorless, gaseous, covalent compound.
Bromine (molecular Br2) is an covalent compound
SBr2
SBr2 (sulfur dibromide)
The bond between sulfur and bromine is covalent.
Sulfur Dibromide = SBr2
SCl6
SF6
Sulfur is a covalent solid having the unit cells S8 so it is formula.
Sulfur hexafluoride is a colorless, gaseous, covalent compound.
Bromine (molecular Br2) is an covalent compound
Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br2)
covalent because Br2 is just to Bromine atoms bonded together
Sulfur dibromide is a bent molecule. In general bent molecules are polar. The situation is a bit complex with SBr2 - when looking at each S-Br bond the difference in electronegativity is small. Bromine is slightly more electronegative than sulfur - so you can think of this bond as either non-polar covalent OR slightly polar. If you draw a vector in the direction of the partial charges (dipoles going from sulfur - to bromine) there will be a very slight polarity. The polarity is very small and since S-Br bonds are typically considered non-polar, many people classify SBr2 as a non-polar molecule since the dipole is very small.