YES!!!
2Rb(s) + Br2(l) = 2RbBr(s)
It is similar to the sodium / chlorine reaction, and compound.
No. As they are both nonmetals carbon and bromine will form a covalent compound.
RbBr is the chemical formula of rubidium bromide.RbBr has an ionic bond.
The transition metal zinc (Zn) will form an ionic bond with the halogen bromine (Br) to form the compound zinc bromide (ZnBr2) according to this equation: Zn + 2Br => ZnBr2
It's ionic if it is bonded with hydrogen or other metals, and it's covalent if with other nonmetals, but since bromine is a halogen, it is most likely to form ionic compounds.
Potassium and bromine form the ionic compound potassium bromide with the chemical formula KBr.
The name of the compound is: Rubidium bromide The Chemical formula is: RbBr
No. As they are both nonmetals carbon and bromine will form a covalent compound.
Potassium and bromine form the ionic compound potassium bromide with the chemical formula KBr.
The transition metal zinc (Zn) will form an ionic bond with the halogen bromine (Br) to form the compound zinc bromide (ZnBr2) according to this equation: Zn + 2Br => ZnBr2
RbBr is the chemical formula of rubidium bromide.RbBr has an ionic bond.
It's ionic if it is bonded with hydrogen or other metals, and it's covalent if with other nonmetals, but since bromine is a halogen, it is most likely to form ionic compounds.
Potassium and bromine form the ionic compound potassium bromide with the chemical formula KBr.
Rubidium (an alkali metal) does not form compounds or ionic bonds with calcium (an alkaline earth metal). The two each form compounds with several of the same elements (e.g. chloride, carbonate, nitrate).
An ionic bond will form between potassium (K) and bromine (Br). This compound, potassium bromide, KBr, is a salt, which is, in general, the combination of a metal (a Group 1 or Group 2 element) and a halogen (a Group 17 element). All salts are bonded ionically.
We know that the alkaline earth metal calcium (Ca) and the halogen bromine (Br) form the ionic compound calcium bromide (CaBr2). Here's the reaction: Ca + 2Br => CaBr2
Generally a metal with a nonmetal forms an ionic bond. Sodium is a metal and bromine is a nonmetal, so they will form an ionic bond, forming the compound sodium bromide, NaBr.
Potassium will form ionic compound with group 17 elements (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine) and group 16 elements (oxygen, sulphur, selenium).