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I don't think there is such a substance. The nearest would be sodium bromate. NaBrO3
A 'Bromide' does not exist independently but is a salt of hydrobromic acid HBr, and therefore the bromide ion has to be combined with a metal ion to produce a stable independent compound. The most common bromides are Potassium Bromide KBr and Sodium Bromide NaBr, although there are others like Ammonium Bromide NH4Br (where the '4' is small and subscript), Magnesium Bromide MgBr2 (where the '2' is small and subscript), and Aluminium Bromide AlBr3 (where the '3' is small and subscript).
The compound sodium bromide is formed by the formation of ionic bonds between sodium and bromide ions.
NaBr is an ionic compound. Generally, a metal bonded with a nonmetal forms an ionic compound. Also, the difference in electronegativity between Na and Br is 2.03, which is definitely ionic.
Sodium bromide is a white, crystalline solid.
I don't think there is such a substance. The nearest would be sodium bromate. NaBrO3
one is CALCIUM bromide the other is SODIUM bromide. ;p
Sodium Bromate(NaBrO3) and Sodium Bromide(NaBr) should both form bromine when sulfuric acid is added, however Sodium Bromide will not oxidize itself while Sodium Bromate will. With sodium bromide, youd also have to add an oxidizer to get bromine to form. Ive used both hydrogen peroxide and potassium permanganate.
Sodium bromate was ingested by hair dressers in Japan in a suicide attempt. One of the things that this caused was kidney failure. Excesses of potassium, sodium and bromate ions are all passed via the kidney. Bromate is an oxidizer, and will reduce fairly easily to bromide ion oxidizing whatever it can with pH changes. Excess potassium (whether or not with the bromate anion) is an issue for people with kidney problems. Potassium bromate is sometimes mixed in flour when bread is made. It looks like flour. Baking converts most of the bromate to bromide. If the mixing is not thorough, potassium bromide / bromate can be ingested in large quantities. So it is a "leading contributor" only because it has a known use in the human food chain.
A 'Bromide' does not exist independently but is a salt of hydrobromic acid HBr, and therefore the bromide ion has to be combined with a metal ion to produce a stable independent compound. The most common bromides are Potassium Bromide KBr and Sodium Bromide NaBr, although there are others like Ammonium Bromide NH4Br (where the '4' is small and subscript), Magnesium Bromide MgBr2 (where the '2' is small and subscript), and Aluminium Bromide AlBr3 (where the '3' is small and subscript).
range of services includingkits ang fermentation and molecular fermentation
well the calcium bromide solution is less soluble than the sodium bromide..... but the lab has nothing to do with the solubility; so i believe it shouldn't make a difference.
The compound sodium bromide is formed by the formation of ionic bonds between sodium and bromide ions.
NaBr is an ionic compound. Generally, a metal bonded with a nonmetal forms an ionic compound. Also, the difference in electronegativity between Na and Br is 2.03, which is definitely ionic.
copper bromide + sodium Hydroxide = Copper Hydroxide + Sodium Bromide CuBr2 + 2NaOH = Cu (OH)2 + 2NaBr
Sodium Bromide
what is the color of aqueous sodium bromide? what is the color of aqueous sodium bromide?