1. If you think to halogens: fluorine, chlorine, iodine, bromine, astatine, ununseptium
2. If you think to chemical compounds: halides or halogenides are the binary compounds with metals of the above mentioned elements (but also exist organic halides, etc.). Some halides exist as natural minerals.
If you think to halogens (not halides) bromine is a liquid.
The formula of sodium halide depends on which halogen it is paired with. For example, the formula for sodium chloride (table salt) is NaCl, for sodium fluoride it is NaF, and for sodium bromide it is NaBr.
When an alkyl halide reacts with silver nitrate, a substitution reaction takes place where the halide ion is displaced by the silver ion to form a silver halide precipitate. The alkyl group remains unchanged in the reaction.
Sodium plus Halogen yields Sodium Halide
Flourite is in a group of minerals known as halides.
Iodine belongs to halide family. It has atomic number fifty three.
Bromine
Iodine is a halide
If you think to halogens (not halides) bromine is a liquid.
Iodine
iodine
iodine
An HQI metal halide lamp belongs to the family of metal halide HID lamps. Hydrargyum quartz iodide (HQI) lamps differ from standard metal halide lamps in that they are often smaller and are offered in double ended versions and require a special socket. The gasses and metal halide salts used in HQI and standard metal halide lamps are the same.
Yes, iodine is a halogen element and therefore classified as a halide.
The formula of sodium halide depends on which halogen it is paired with. For example, the formula for sodium chloride (table salt) is NaCl, for sodium fluoride it is NaF, and for sodium bromide it is NaBr.
No. A 70 Watt metal halide bulb can not be replaced with a 150 Watt halide bulb.
Yes