A. iodine
B. silver
C. bromine
D. manganese
The chemical symbol for iodine is I. So for compounds like silver iodide, we denote them as AgI. Abbreviations make it easy for us to represent and identify elements in chemical formula and equations.
Yes, silver does react with bromine. Silver becomes oxidized in the presents of bromine gas, that's why silver jewelry tarnishes.
Silver iodine is a chemical compound composed of silver and iodine atoms. It is often used in cloud seeding to induce rain by dispersing it into clouds to encourage the formation of ice crystals. Silver iodine has also been used in photography and medical applications.
Bromine (Br) can combine with almost every element. A few examples include: Oxygen Chlorine Fluorine Potassium Gold Silver Sodium Strontium
Silver can combine with elements such as sulfur, oxygen, chlorine, and fluorine to form compounds. Some common silver compounds include silver nitrate (AgNO3), silver sulfide (Ag2S), silver oxide (Ag2O), silver chloride (AgCl), and silver fluoride (AgF).
Iodine, bromine, chlorine, sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen
Iodine ******** And silver.
Lithium Fluorine Sodium Potassium Copper Magnesium Calcium Zinc Phosphorus Chromium Sulphur Selenium Molybdenum Chlorine Iodine Manganese Beryllium Strontium Barium Cadium Mercury Boron Aluminium Vanadium Arsenic Bromine NickelLithium Fluorine Silver Sodium Potassium Copper Magnesium Calcium Zinc Phosphorus Chromium Sulphur Selenium Molybdenum Chlorine Iodine Manganese Beryllium I Strontium Barium Cadium Mercury Boron Aluminium Vanadium Arsenic Bromine Nickel
AgBr is a compound composed of silver (Ag) and bromine (Br) elements.
Yes, spa bromine can tarnish silver. Bromine is a reactive element that can cause silver to tarnish and corrode over time. It is best to remove silver jewelry before using spa products containing bromine to prevent damage.
The chemical symbol for iodine is I. So for compounds like silver iodide, we denote them as AgI. Abbreviations make it easy for us to represent and identify elements in chemical formula and equations.
Yes, silver does react with bromine. Silver becomes oxidized in the presents of bromine gas, that's why silver jewelry tarnishes.
Ethanol and NaBr. The delta negative OH dissociates from Sodium creating an +Na ion. The Bromine withdraws the electron density towards itself leaving the Carbon delta +. This means that the -OH will attack the +C removing -Br.
Iodine has 53 protons, while silver has 47 protons.
the examples are : 1. aluminium 2. copper 3. gold 4. silver 5. iodine 6. sulphur 7. carbon 8. bromine
Silver compounds are mostly insoluble (except silver nitrate of course) so you can safely assume that the precipitate you obtained was a silver compound and knowing silver bromide forms a yellow precipitate, it is a good bet to guess there is bromide ions (note ions not bromine) present. your compound is likely a bromide salt rather than bromine water or pure bromine (i'm assuming this is a high school lab report). but if your test compound was fuming reddish brown fumes then it is probably bromine water
Silver iodine is a chemical compound composed of silver and iodine atoms. It is often used in cloud seeding to induce rain by dispersing it into clouds to encourage the formation of ice crystals. Silver iodine has also been used in photography and medical applications.