The Bromide atom has a charge of -1. Bromide is found is seawater--thusly, seafood and seaweed have higher sources of bromide than most any other food. Bromide salts are also used extensively in medicine, particularly veterinary sciences.
Yes, they form BrCl and BrCl3 . such compounds have covalent bonds and known as Interhalogens.
Neutrons have no charge, protons have a positive charge and electrons have a negative charge.
A positive charge is a positive electrical charge. Particles with no charge are called neutral particles.
A charge which is not a positive charge is a negative charge.
The charge on an electron is never equal to the charge on a neutron. An electron carries one negative charge and a neutron has no net charge.
The oxidation number of Br in BrCl3 is +3. In the BrCl3 molecule, the total oxidation numbers of all the atoms must add up to zero, with chlorine having an oxidation number of -1 each and the overall charge of the molecule being neutral.
The central atom in BrCl3 is bromine (Br). The bromine atom in BrCl3 adopts sp3d hybridization, which involves the mixing of one 4s, three 4p, and one 4d atomic orbitals to form five sp3d hybrid orbitals.
The chemical formula for bromine trichloride is BrCl3.
Trigonal pyramidal (the EG is tetrahedral but one side is a lone pair)
Yes, they form BrCl and BrCl3 . such compounds have covalent bonds and known as Interhalogens.
The compound name for Cl3F is trichlorofluoromethane.
This molecule is trigonal pyramid because it has 3 bonds with Br and one lone pair of electrons and if you look at a tetrahedral trigonal pyramid Lewis Structure you will see it matches
No, Bromine trichloride (BrCl3) is a covalent compound because it is formed by sharing electrons between bromine and chlorine atoms rather than transferring electrons as in ionic compounds.
what ranking charge pari passu?
Electrons have negative charge and protons have a positive charge, neutrons have no charge.
Neutrons have no charge, protons have a positive charge and electrons have a negative charge.
No, protons have positive charge, electrons have negative charge and neutrons have no charge