Silver bromide is a photo reactive substance, the colour of the bottle keeps light out.
it turns grey in color
The silver ions in the exposed area will be reduced to black metallic silver in a matter of minutes.
Oxidisation (more commonly known as rust) causes the brown tinge that coats silver.
yes it can
It is reacting with Light. Form chlorine with the reaction.
it turns grey in color
Some solvent or chemicals are sensitive to light, and they get oxidised when they are exposed to it.
The silver ions in the exposed area will be reduced to black metallic silver in a matter of minutes.
because it can decompose quickly if kept in transparent bottles
Silver nitrate is very susceptible to reactions that destroy it, catalyzed by short wavelength light, which is strongly absorbed by brown bottles.
Oxidisation (more commonly known as rust) causes the brown tinge that coats silver.
Because even though silver halides are way more photosensitive, silver nitrate is a bit, and storing in a bottle which lets the light pass through freely would affect it shelf life.
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Moisture in the air condenses on the cold bottle. If the air is dry, there will be no dew on the bottle.
Silver becomes tarnished with Ag2S, silver sulfide.
Moisture in the air condenses on the cold bottle. If the air is dry, there will be no dew on the bottle.