Want this question answered?
Potassium bromide has ionic bonding, and iodine bromide has covalent bonding.
Chloroform displace iodine from KI and the solution become red.
They don't displace each other.
Potassium bromide is basically a chemical.
"Potassium bromide"
No. However, bromine would displace iodine in potassium iodide.
Potassium bromide has ionic bonding, and iodine bromide has covalent bonding.
Bromine and Potassium iodide react to form Potassium bromide and Iodine.
Iodine is lower in the halogen displacement series than bromine, i.e., iodine is less electronegative than bromine. However both chlorine and fluorine can displace bromine in sodium bromide, as they are more electronegative.
No. Bromine is more reactive than iodine. Therefore, bromine will displace iodine.
because it is gay
2KI+Br2 ---->2KBr +I2
Chlorine is more reactive than bromine thus bromine is unable to displace chlorine to form potassium bromide.
Chloroform displace iodine from KI and the solution become red.
They don't displace each other.
potassium bromide + fluorine --> potassium fluoride + bromide
Its actually: 2KI(aq)+Br2(aq)-> I2(s)+2KBr(aq)