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
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.
Na is solid. Hg, Br are liquids at room temp.
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.