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Sulfur
Yes: Bromine reacts with sodium to form sodium bromide.
It is an ionic bond because sodium is a metal and bromine is a nonmetal.
Sodium and bromine are the elements in sodium bromide (NaBr) compound.
You can add the sodium hydroxide solution(NaOH). Because NaOH reacts with Br2(Bromine) and generates NaBr. NaBr is dissolved in water while bromobenzene is layered with water, then you could remove Bromine by a liquid separation. The reaction is Br2 + 2NaOH = NaBr + NaBrO + H2O.
Sulfur
Bromine has 7 electrons in its outer shell and needs to gain one electron to have a full outer shell and become an ion. It will gain this electron from an atom that has one electron in its outer shell such as Lithium or Sodium.
remove an electron. Na = Na+ + e-
Sodium + Bromine ----> Sodium bromide2 Na + Br2 ----> 2 NaBr
Sodium and bromine are chemical elements, not properties; the chemical reaction between sodium and bromine is a chemical process, not a property.
Yes: Bromine reacts with sodium to form sodium bromide.
The difference electronegativity values of sodium and bromine are; Sodium(Na) 0.9, Bromine(Br) 2.8 thus a difference of 1.9.
It is an ionic bond because sodium is a metal and bromine is a nonmetal.
Every halogen has the capacity to accept one electron from a sodium atom and to thereby achieve a noble gas electron configuration of eight valance electrons. The halogens are fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
Sodium and bromine are the elements in sodium bromide (NaBr) compound.
Sodium Bromide = NaBr
+ (positive)