Yes, its negative ion is called Bromide = Br-
Bromide.
Every Group I element (that is, the ones in the first column) have a ... Thus, bromine, oxygen, and carbon thus all form negative ions, while magnesium forms a positive ion (+2)
Bromine (Br) forms a anion (negative charge) because it is a halogen, and it gains 1 electron. However, when it gains that electron (Br)- its name changes to Bromide ion.
Bromide
No. Bromine is more reactive than iodine. Therefore, bromine will displace iodine.
Bromide.
a negative ion
4p
Br-. Bromine will grab an electron to make itself more stable, which makes it a negative ion.
The bromine ion is referred to as bromide, and it is Br^-
Bromine has 7 electrons in its valency shell and so readily forms a negative ion. Xenon has 8 electrons and so is inert.
"Bromine" is the name of an atom or an element. The corresponding ion is named "bromide".
Lithium ion is Li+ and a bromine ion (called a bromide ion) is Br- and the compound formed from them would be LiBr.
The ion bromide is Br-.
Every Group I element (that is, the ones in the first column) have a ... Thus, bromine, oxygen, and carbon thus all form negative ions, while magnesium forms a positive ion (+2)
A bromine ion with only 26 electrons is not possible. A bromine atom has 35 electrons and it can't loose 9 electrons.
Bromine (Br) forms a anion (negative charge) because it is a halogen, and it gains 1 electron. However, when it gains that electron (Br)- its name changes to Bromide ion.