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Gold (Au) reacts violently with the Halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine and Astatine).
mercury
9.11 g
Silver oxide is photosensitive and silver can be separated.
One example of a compound that contains silver is silver nitrate, AgNO3.
Gold (Au) reacts violently with the Halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine and Astatine).
When silver nitrate reacts with hydrochloride a white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed.
silver bromide
mercury
9.11 g
Silver compounds are mostly insoluble (except silver nitrate of course) so you can safely assume that the precipitate you obtained was a silver compound and knowing silver bromide forms a yellow precipitate, it is a good bet to guess there is bromide ions (note ions not bromine) present. your compound is likely a bromide salt rather than bromine water or pure bromine (i'm assuming this is a high school lab report). but if your test compound was fuming reddish brown fumes then it is probably bromine water
Ag2S = silver sulfide
A white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed
Silver carbonate (AgCO3), a white precipitate is formed.
An ionic compound, specifically a salt, named silver bromide.
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Yes, silver does react with bromine. Silver becomes oxidized in the presents of bromine gas, that's why silver jewelry tarnishes.