Calcium Bromide is a white, granular salt, very deliquescent, odorless, having a pungent, saline and bitter taste.
sodium bromide is not an acid or base it is a solid neutral salt highly soluble in water.
Bromide is not, in an of itself, an acid or a base. Bromide is capable of combining with an H+ ion and then becomes Hydrobromic Acid. Due to Bromine's position on the periodic table it is likely to form acids, not bases.
Sodium Bromide is produced from the reaction of Hydrobromic acid and sodium hydroxide.
Parent Acid-HBr Parent Base-Al(OH)3 and it is and acidic salt
The acid-base reaction of hydrobromic acid, HBr, and calcium hydroxide, Ca(OH)2, forms a salt and water, namely the bromine salt of calcium, CaBr2, and water, H2O. It looks like this: HBr + Ca(OH)2 => CaBr2 + H2O All we need to do to balance the equation is make a couple of small changes: 2HBr + Ca(OH)2 => CaBr2 + 2H2O
Hydrogen bromide is a strong acid.
Neither, because it a salt of strong base(Calcium) and strong acid(Chloric acid)
sodium bromide is not an acid or base it is a solid neutral salt highly soluble in water.
Ammonium bromide is a weak acid.
Calcium Chloride is neither acid nor base. It is a neutral salt.
It is not a base or acid as it is neutral and has a PH value of 7
Calcium carbonate, like other carbonates, is alkaline.
Calcium carbonate is an alkali salt. Alkali salts are bases, and are formed from the neutralization reaction between a strong base and a weak acid. For example: Ca(OH)2 + H2CO3 --> CaCO3 + H2O strong base + weak acid ---> alkali salt + water
Bromide is not, in an of itself, an acid or a base. Bromide is capable of combining with an H+ ion and then becomes Hydrobromic Acid. Due to Bromine's position on the periodic table it is likely to form acids, not bases.
CaSO4 is neather acid or base it is a salt which means it is nutreal.
it is neutral
Sodium Bromide is produced from the reaction of Hydrobromic acid and sodium hydroxide.