PBr3- phosphorus tribromide
PBr3, PBr5 decompose above 1000C to give PBr3
Formula: PBr3
No. Since BH3 lacks a lone pair it would be a Lewis acid.
There is no such compound named Phosphorus bromine. It you refer to the product formed in the reaction of phosphorus and bromine, its Phosphorus Tribromide = PBr3
It's Lead (IV)Bromide We use roman numerals when it's a transition metal + nonmetal
Diphosphorus pentabromide is the official name.
PBr5 or PBr3. PBr3 is more stable.
PBr3, PBr5 decompose above 1000C to give PBr3
The atoms in a molecule of phosphorus tribromide, PBr3, are held together by polar covalent bonds.
PBr3
Phosphorus Tribromide
Trigonal Pyramidal
+3, -1
Formula: PBr3
Formula: PBr3
PBr3 is non-polar: the dipole moment of PBr3 is zero and therefor it is non-polar.
If you are meaning phosphorus tribromide then it is PBr3