Yes
Hydrobromic acid
Fe + 2HBr = H2 + FeBr2 Iron plus hydrobromic acid equals hydrogen gas plus iron (II) bromide
Hydrobromic Acid
HBr is hydrobromic acid. Simlarly for the other halogens. HF = hydrofluoric acid HCl = hydrochloric acid HI = hydroiodic acid (Careful with the spelling of this one). HAs = hydroastinic acid ( Not characterised).
The chemical formula of hydrobromic acis is HBr.
Hydrobromic acid
Fe + 2HBr = H2 + FeBr2 Iron plus hydrobromic acid equals hydrogen gas plus iron (II) bromide
Hydrobromic Acid
They may by collectively called halides.But, hydrogen and chlorine make hydrochloric ACID, H + Bromine make hydrobromic ACID, sodium and chlorine make common salt and chlorine and chlorine make diatomic chlorine gas.
HBr is hydrobromic acid. Simlarly for the other halogens. HF = hydrofluoric acid HCl = hydrochloric acid HI = hydroiodic acid (Careful with the spelling of this one). HAs = hydroastinic acid ( Not characterised).
The chemical formula of hydrobromic acis is HBr.
Hydrobromic Acid is HBr. Diatomic acids are typically hydrogen combined with a halogen. For nominal purposes, it's usually the prefix "hydro-" with the root of the halogen, but instead of having "-ine" at the end you have "-ic." HBr -> Hydrobromic acid HCl -> Hydrochloric acid HI -> Hydroiodic acid
They may by collectively called halides.But, hydrogen and chlorine make hydrochloric ACID, H + Bromine make hydrobromic ACID, sodium and chlorine make common salt and chlorine and chlorine make diatomic chlorine gas.
Hydrobromic acid is a homogeneous mixture of hydrogen bromide and water.
HBr is a gas which when dissolved in water produces Hydrobromic acid. So hydrobromic acid is generally written as HBr but it is actually HBr(aq). It is sometimes also written as H3O+ Br-
This is definitely an acid. It is the chemical formula for hydrobromic acid, which is actually one of the six strongest acids. It will dissociate immediately in water to form a high concentration of the H+ ion, and the concentration of that ion is what determines the pH of the substance. High ion concentration, low pH, strong acid.
Yes. Chlorine gas reacts with water to give hypochlorous acid and hydrochloric acid Cl2 + H2O -> HOCl + HCl The hypochlorous acid is the "disinfectant" most effective at pH 5, at low pH it forms hypochlorite ions. Remember if the water is impure the chlorine can potentially react with the impurities.