Methyl Bromide is an odorless colorless gas
acetone + ethyl magnesium bromide = 2-methyl-2-butanol
They would form some sort of brominated hydrocarbon of which there many varieties. The simplest among them are methyl bromide (CH3Br), methylene bromide (CH3Br2), and bromoform (CHBr3)
I haven't done much investigation in this, but it appears that the nuts don't naturally contain bromine. However, some companies use Methyl bromide fumigation to kill worms. (Walnuts were mentioned) I'm guessing this is where bromine is introduced into our nuts. Research Methyl Bromide fumigation. If they use it on nuts, what else are they using it on?
Tin (II) Bromide.
magnesium bromide hexahydrate
ch3Br
acetone + ethyl magnesium bromide = 2-methyl-2-butanol
2CH3-Cl + 2Na ---------Anhdrous ether-------> CH3-CH3 + 2NaCl
HBr
Methyl bromide i think.
Yes it is bromomethane or methyl bromide.
Methyl bromide reaches the ozone layer. Bromine is the element that destroys ozone.
The bromide ion is Br-. A bromide is a chemical compound where bromine is the most electronegative element. It may be ionic and contain the bromide ion, Br- or covalent like methyl bromide, CH3Br.
This is when acetylene reacted with one of the magnesium bromide. For instance, acteylene reacted with methyl magnesium bromide forming 3-hexa-1-eyne.
48.988 kilograms The density of methyl bromide is 1.730g/cm^3 cubic foot is (12inx2.54cm/in)^3 = 28,316.8 cm^3 28,316.8 cm^3 x 1.730g/cm^3 = 48,988g or 48.988 kg
Bromine is more electronegative than the carbon, so when it bonds with carbon, as in methyl bromide, the bromine pulls the electrons closer to itself, creating a polar bond.
They would form some sort of brominated hydrocarbon of which there many varieties. The simplest among them are methyl bromide (CH3Br), methylene bromide (CH3Br2), and bromoform (CHBr3)