250g of Ne
Fluorine has greater electron affinity than bromine, or any other element.
Bromine, its as simple as its more to the RHS of the periodic table
No, bromine has a higher electronegativity than potassium. Bromine is more electronegative because it has a greater ability to attract electrons in a chemical bond than potassium.
Yes, chlorine is more electronegative than bromine. Chlorine has a higher electronegativity value on the Pauling scale compared to bromine, indicating that chlorine has a greater ability to attract electrons in a chemical bond.
Vapors always have more entropy than liquids of the same substance at the same temperature, because the number of energy states accessible to molecules in the vapor phase is much greater than in the liquid phase.
Fluorine has greater electron affinity than bromine, or any other element.
Two natural isotopes of bromine are known:- bromine-79: 50,69 %- bromine-81: 49,31 %
Bromine, its as simple as its more to the RHS of the periodic table
No, bromine has a higher electronegativity than potassium. Bromine is more electronegative because it has a greater ability to attract electrons in a chemical bond than potassium.
The element in group one with a higher atomic number than chlorine but lower atomic number than bromine is iodine. Its atomic number is 53, which is greater than chlorine's atomic number of 17 but less than bromine's atomic number of 35.
>= is the comparison operator that means greater than or equal to.
>= is the comparison operator that means greater than or equal to.
GREATER
Specific gravity relative to what? I assume you mean water. Bromine has a density of 3.11 gm/c^3, which is 3.11 times that of water. That could work for whatever you are doing.
An iodine atom has one more principal energy level than a bromine atom. Therefore the radius of an iodine atom is greater than the latter.
Fluorine has the highest electronegativity of any element. Therefore, the energy released when hydrogen and fluorine react is greater than the energy released when hydrogen and bromine react, and that energy must be resupplied to cause either bond to break.
Bromine will form a more polar bond with phosphorus compared to iodine. This is because bromine is more electronegative than iodine, resulting in a greater difference in electronegativity between bromine and phosphorus, making the bond more polar.