No. Bromine is an element. Br2, dibromine, is the diatomic form of the element. A compound is formed from 2 or more different elements.
No, elemental Bromine or Br2 is not an ion
Molecular nitrogen is: N2 Molecular bromide is: Br2 Nitrogen tribromide is: NBr3
If a compound contains at least one metal atom and at least one nonmetal atom, the compound is ionic. Na (Sodium) is a metal. Br (Bromine) is a nonmetal. Therefore, the compound NaBr is ionic.
Ammonia is a molecular compound and not ionic.
its not a molecular compound its an ion
Bromine (molecular Br2) is an covalent compound
If you mean Br2, it is a compound.
compound
Molecular nitrogen is: N2 Molecular bromide is: Br2 Nitrogen tribromide is: NBr3
No, elemental Bromine or Br2 is not an ion
No it is not an acid.It is a neutral compound.
No
No, molecular bromine is bonded by a single bond.
Binary compound: a chemical compound with only two types of atoms; examples: NaCl, HCl, CaS, H2O.
If a compound contains at least one metal atom and at least one nonmetal atom, the compound is ionic. Na (Sodium) is a metal. Br (Bromine) is a nonmetal. Therefore, the compound NaBr is ionic.
Bromine is a molecular compound Br2 and the intermolecular forces are london dispersion forces. Potassium chloride is an ionic compound forming a lattice with strong electrostatic forces holding the lattice together. Less thermal energy is required to shake solid Br2 apart than that required for KCl
Yes. Aspirin is a molecular compound.