Fluorine will replace bromine to produce the compound lithium fluoride in a single replacement reaction.
It is inverse.
there is none sodium is its own element SORRY!!:-(
First, you need to find out if this is a ionic or covalent compoundSince Carbon and Bromine are both non-metals, this is covalentName the first element (Carbon)Add the prefix for the number of elements (Tetra)Name the second element, remove ending, and replace with -ide (Bromide)So, CBr4 is Carbon Tetrabromide
Below it on the list on the periodic table
Well, if your talking about the reaction between sodium bromide (NaBr) and Iodine, then I don't think that it will replace bromine. Bromine is higher on the reactivity series, so if they come into contact with each other, there won't simply be any reaction
Yes. Fluorine is more reactive than iodine.
The element of hydrogen is one of the most widely seen and used in the world. If you are creating organic compounds and need to replace hydrogen you should use fluorine.
Lithium or Lamictal
It is inverse.
An element in the activity series can replace any element below it on the list. The ability of an element to react is referred to as the element's activity.
well, i don't really get your mean, if your lithium battery declines, you can replace it for a same capacity, working volt, and the part number.
there is none sodium is its own element SORRY!!:-(
Replace Fuse Replace socket Replace element
Yes, 3.7V and 3.6V are the volts of lithium battery cells, and one is Li-ion battery cell and the other is lithium polymer battery cell. Both of them can be called as lithium batteries
First, you need to find out if this is a ionic or covalent compoundSince Carbon and Bromine are both non-metals, this is covalentName the first element (Carbon)Add the prefix for the number of elements (Tetra)Name the second element, remove ending, and replace with -ide (Bromide)So, CBr4 is Carbon Tetrabromide
Below it on the list on the periodic table
Well, if your talking about the reaction between sodium bromide (NaBr) and Iodine, then I don't think that it will replace bromine. Bromine is higher on the reactivity series, so if they come into contact with each other, there won't simply be any reaction