An Ionic bond.
Sodium bromide has an ionic bond.
Generally a metal with a nonmetal forms an ionic bond. Sodium is a metal and bromine is a nonmetal, so they will form an ionic bond, forming the compound sodium bromide, NaBr.
NaCl, NaOH, NaBr, KBr, KOH
NaBr is ionic. There is no compound by the formula NaBr3.
NaBr is ionic
We know that the alkali metal sodium (Na) will form an ionic bond with the halogen bromine (Br) to create sodium bromide (NaBr). The equation looks like this: Na + Br => NaBr
Generally the ionic bond is formed between a metal and a nonmetal (cation and anion). As an example, sodium and bromine: sodium bromide, NaBr.
Generally the ionic bond is formed between a metal and a nonmetal (cation and anion). As an example, sodium and bromine: sodium bromide, NaBr.
No, NaBr is a neutral salt.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( 75.0 ml = 0.075 Liters ) Get moles NaBr 1.5 M NaBr = moles NaBr/0.075 Liters = 0.1125 moles NaBr (102.89 grams/1 mole NaBr) = 11.575 grams NaBr ( call it 12 grams ) ----------------------------------------------------
NaBr is a salt.