The chemical reaction is:
Cl2 + 2 NaBr = 2 NaCl + Br2
The symbol equation for the reaction between chlorine and sodium bromide is: Cl2 + 2NaBr → 2NaCl + Br2.
chlorine plus potassium bromide gives bromine plus potassium chloride. Here is the symbol equation, but remember that the numbers AFTER the symbols should be subscripts. Cl2 + 2KBr = Br2 + 2KCl
The ionic equation for the reaction between aqueous chlorine and aqueous sodium bromide is: Cl2(aq) + 2NaBr(aq) -> 2NaCl(aq) + Br2(aq)
Cl2 + 2NaBr -> 2NaCl + Br2
The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is 2NaBr + Cl2 -> 2NaCl + Br2. It shows that one molecule of molecular chlorine reacts with two molecules of sodium bromide to produce two molecules of sodium chloride and one molecule of bromine.
The reaction of potassium bromide with chlorine is known as a displacement reaction, where the more reactive chlorine displaces the less reactive bromide to form potassium chloride and elemental bromine.
I think this is right... Cl2 + 2NaBr = 2NaCl + Br2
Aluminum bromide (AlBr3) + Chlorine (Cl2) → Aluminum chloride (AlCl3) + Bromine (Br2)
The balanced equation for potassium bromide (KBr) and hydrochloric acid (HCl) reacting is: KBr + HCl → KCl + HBr. This reaction is a double displacement reaction, where potassium chloride (KCl) and hydrobromic acid (HBr) are formed.
Bromine is diatomic, so 2 atoms make up Bromine as a reactant. Mg + Br2 ----> MgBr2
what is the color of aqueous sodium bromide? what is the color of aqueous sodium bromide?
The chemical equation is:2 AlBr3 + 3 Cl2 = 2 AlCl3 + 3 Br2