It is Sodium Bromide, which is a halide (group 7 elements), yes, it is a variation of salt in a compound.
Yes, NaBr is ionic because of the large difference in electronegativity between these two elements.
Sodium is a metal and Bromine is a halogen. This is a typical combination for a salt. Sodium Chloride, NaCl is similar; Chlorine is also in the halogen group of elements.
Yes, NaBr is ionically bonded.
NaBr is a salt.
Sodium bromide (NaBr) is a salt.
No, NaBr is a neutral salt.
Sodium bromide is a salt.
HBr + NaOH ------> NaBr + H2O This is an acid-base reaction. The compounds will disassociate into ions in solution. The hydrogen from the HBr will go to the OH- and form water. The NaBr is a salt.
NaBr is a salt.
Sodium bromide (NaBr) is a salt.
No, NaBr is a neutral salt.
Sodium bromide is a salt.
This does not make a buffer because HBr is a STRONG acid, and for a buffer you need a WEAK acid and the salt of the acid.
HBr + NaOH ------> NaBr + H2O This is an acid-base reaction. The compounds will disassociate into ions in solution. The hydrogen from the HBr will go to the OH- and form water. The NaBr is a 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 ) ----------------------------------------------------
Salts of bromine are called bromides and many are known: CaBr2, KBr, NaBr, LiBr etc.
Sodium bromide. Compare to NaCl which is sodium chloride (or table salt) or NaI which is sodium iodide.
The melting point of NaBr is 747 oC.
Sodium and bromine are the elements in sodium bromide (NaBr) compound.
2 Na + Br2 --> 2 NaBr