Sodium Bromide
The ionic compound formed from sodium (Na) and bromine (Br) is sodium bromide, with the chemical formula NaBr.
NaBr is an ionic compound formed between sodium (Na+) and bromide (Br-) ions. It exists as a crystal lattice structure in the solid state, where the positively charged sodium ions are attracted to the negatively charged bromide ions through ionic bonds.
Sodium Bromide
Yeah, an example is a radical anion that it creates (ketyl): Diphenylketyl Na + Ph2CO →Na+Ph2CO−
The formula of the anion in sodium bromide is Br^-. Sodium bromide is composed of the sodium cation (Na^+) and the bromide anion (Br^-), which combine in a 1:1 ratio to form the compound NaBr.
NaBr is a formula unit. It represents the simplest, whole-number ratio of ions in an ionic compound, sodium bromide. It does not represent individual molecules but rather the combination of one sodium ion (Na+) and one bromide ion (Br-).
If a compound contains at least one metal atom and at least one nonmetal atom, the compound is ionic. Na (Sodium) is a metal. Br (Bromine) is a nonmetal. Therefore, the compound NaBr is ionic.
+1 for Na -1 for Br
Na is solid. Hg, Br are liquids at room temp.
Yes, sodium fluoride is a molecular compound. It consists of individual sodium ions (Na+) and fluoride ions (F-) that are ionically bonded together in a fixed ratio.
Sodium bromide is the ionic compound formed by the combination of sodium (Na) cation and bromide (Br) anion. It is a white crystalline solid that is commonly used in pharmaceuticals and photographic chemicals.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is an ionic compound.