allways say to s yah i get it miss thank and the clas will get popcorn
Bromine was discovered independently by two people, Carl Löwig and Antoine Balard. Löwig extracted the element from mineral water, Balard from seaweed ash. For more detail, I invite you to see the bromine page on wikipedia.
Bromine is a halogen element, therefore it's nonmetallic.
Bromine is a liquid at Room, but it give out some bromine vapor
Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br2)
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
allways say to s yah i get it miss thank and the clas will get popcorn
Bromine gas, Br2, has covalent bonds. However, the element bromine does form ionic bonds with other substances (sodium bromide, etc.).
Bromine Pentachloride is the name of BrCI5.
Bromine is bromine no matter how toxic
allways say to s yah i get it miss thank and the clas will get popcorn
Bromine was discovered independently by two people, Carl Löwig and Antoine Balard. Löwig extracted the element from mineral water, Balard from seaweed ash. For more detail, I invite you to see the bromine page on wikipedia.
Liquid = Bromine Solid = Solid Bromine Gas = Bromine vapor
That will be Bromine. Assuming that the question asks which metal is liquid at room temperature, the answer is Mercury. Interestingly, the chemical formula, Hg, derives from the Greek for Runny Silver. As the question specifically states non metal, I didn't include mercury as that is indeed a metal
Yes, a Bromine atom can bond to another similar Bromine atom, to make a Bromine molecule: Br2
Bromine is a halogen element, therefore it's nonmetallic.