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Bromine
A covalent bond
The chemical formula of potassium sorbate is C6H7O2K; potassium sorbate contain carbon, hudrogen oxygen and potassium.
K = Potassium C = Carbon O = Oxygen Potassium, carbon, and oxygen.
No, Bromine is a pure element of halogens family while alkanes are compounds of carbon and hydrogen.
LI " and H "
No. Carbon and bromine, both being nonmetals, will form a covalent bond.
Iodine Bromine Carbon
CCL4 is a carrier for Bromine reaction.
covalent bond
Potassium is metal, arsenic is metalloid, carbon is non metal
Bromine in carbon tetrachloride is a brown-colored solution and used as a chemical test. When drops of bromine/carbon tetrachloride are added to a solution containing an unknown compound and the brown-colored bromine solution disappears, that means that the unknown compound contains carbon-carbon double bonds (since it absorbed the bromine solution). On the other hand, if the brown-colored bromine solution doesn't disappear then it means that no carbon double bonds are present. This is called a "Bromine Test."
No. As they are both nonmetals carbon and bromine will form a covalent compound.
chlorine
Meso-stilbene dibromide is an organic molecule. Its structure is a benzene ring bonded to a carbon with a hydrogen and a bromine. That carbon is bonded to another carbon with a bromine that is ANTI to the first bromine. This carbon is then also bonded to a benzene ring.
a molecular bond will be formed as both, carbon and bromine are non metals
KCo3