The chemical symbol of bromine is Br
Bromium sounds scientific but it is really a word that allows for misdirection.
There is no such chemical. There is bromine which has the chemical symbol Br with 35 protons. Bromine has a tendency to form bromide salts. The symbol for bromide is Br-.
Bromium probably is referring to bromine but it could just be a misdirection.
Bromos means smelly in Latin.
Br
The chemical symbol for the element bromine is Br. The elemental form of bromine is theoretically in the diatomic form (Br2), but it is not found in that form freely. Most of the bromine on earth exist as bromide salts in crustal rock.Chemical symbol for stable bromine is Br2. The state of matter of it is liquid. It is red-brown in colour.
Br is the chemical symbol for Bromine. There are three fluorine atoms covalently bonded, so they form triflouride. The full name is then bromine fluoride.
Yes, bromine (Br) is a chemical element.
Sodium and bromine are chemical elements, not properties; the chemical reaction between sodium and bromine is a chemical process, not a property.
81Br is one of the stable isotopes of bromine.
The chemical symbol for bromine is Br.
the chemical symbol is Br :)
Bromine is an element, one of the halogens. Its chemical symbol is Br.
The chemical symbol for the element bromine is Br. The elemental form of bromine is theoretically in the diatomic form (Br2), but it is not found in that form freely. Most of the bromine on earth exist as bromide salts in crustal rock.Chemical symbol for stable bromine is Br2. The state of matter of it is liquid. It is red-brown in colour.
Br
Bromine vapor is chemically the same as bromine its just physically different so the symbol is still Br. :-)
(Br) with atomic no 35
Br is the chemical symbol (not formula) of bromine.
Bromine is the name of the element that is a liquid halogen. Bromine has the chemical symbol Br, and it has the atomic number of 35.
Bromate is a polyatomic ion made of Bromine and oxygen: BrO3-
the symbol of bromine is Br
Br is the chemical symbol for Bromine. There are three fluorine atoms covalently bonded, so they form triflouride. The full name is then bromine fluoride.