KBrO3 is potassium bromate which is made from KOH (potassium hydroxide) and bromic acid (HBrO3). The salt will have an alkaline (basic) pH >7 when dissolved in water.
KBr, potassium bromide, is a salt, and in solution, it would have a near-neutral pH of around 7.
Potassium bromide is a neutral salt.
It's neutral.
It's a neutral. Neither acid nor basic
It is neutral.
KBr is not an acid at all. It is a neutral salt.
Its neither, it's a salt!
The reaction is:HBr + KOH = KBr + H2O
KBr is a byproduct of the neutralization of an acid and a base. So in simple terms it's neither; it's a neutral salt.
Balanced equation formed: H2SO4 + 2KBr ==> 2HBr + K2SO4
KBr is not an acid at all. It is a neutral salt.
Its neither, it's a salt!
The reaction is:HBr + KOH = KBr + H2O
KF+HBr---->HF+KBr
KBr is a byproduct of the neutralization of an acid and a base. So in simple terms it's neither; it's a neutral salt.
KBr is a byproduct of the neutralization of an acid and a base. So in simple terms it's neither; it's a neutral salt.
Balanced equation formed: H2SO4 + 2KBr ==> 2HBr + K2SO4
Yes, KBr is soluble.
KBR Tower was created in 1973.
KBr is the IUPAC acronym for Potassium Bromide.
KBR - company - was created in 1998.
The final reaction equation is OH- + H+ (YIELDS) H2O. - Stands for one negative charge and + stands for one positive charge. Dont get confused if they try to give you more info than you need like -equimolar-.