Bromine is the only element acts as a liquid in the room temperature. The upper elements in the same group are gases. Iodine is a solid that can undergo sublimation in room temperature.
If you think to halogens (not halides) bromine is a liquid.
A halide is a compound consisting of two parts; a halogen and another electronegative element. The mostcommonhalogens arefluorine(F),chlorine(Cl),bromine(Br),iodine(I), andastatine(At). If put together with another element, they formfluoride,chloride,bromide,iodide, orastatide. Therefore, your question is not right since a halide consist of elements and one element can only be a halogen or non-halogen. (halogen and halide are two different things)
The element in the liquid with formula L2Br is Lithium.
The formula of sodium halide depends on which halogen it is paired with. For example, the formula for sodium chloride (table salt) is NaCl, for sodium fluoride it is NaF, and for sodium bromide it is NaBr.
The family name for the element sulfur is the chalcogens.
Bromine
the only liquid halide is bromine
If you think to halogens (not halides) bromine is a liquid.
Iodine is a halide
Iodine belongs to halide family. It has atomic number fifty three.
iodine
iodine
Bromine Br Atomic number 35. Number of protons-35 Neutrons-45. Electrons-35
Yes, iodine is a halogen element and therefore classified as a halide.
Bromine is a liquid.
Yes, bromine is more reactive than chlorine and can displace chlorine from a halide. This reaction involves the displacement of the less reactive element (chlorine) by the more reactive element (bromine) in the halide compound.
This substance is called a halide.