Sodium + Bromine ----> Sodium bromide
2 Na + Br2 ----> 2 NaBr
Bromine (Br) PS if your in Mrs Timmoneys year nine class at UYSC, its a small world. -- I'm in year nine (in Australia though.) and all of the questions I need for my homework are pretty much written exactly like in the book. hahaha. Is it for science dimentions 3? haha
We know that the alkali metal sodium (Na) will form an ionic bond with the halogen bromine (Br) to create sodium bromide (NaBr). The equation looks like this: Na + Br => NaBr
the symbol of bromine is Br
Br2 + 3NaHSO3 = 2NaBr + NaHSO4 + H2O + 2SO2
The chemical symbol for bromine is Br.
2Na + Br2 --> 2NaBr =============
2Na + Br2 = 2NaBr
This equation is 2 Na + Br2 -> 2 NaBr.
Na2O sodium oxide
Bromine (Br) PS if your in Mrs Timmoneys year nine class at UYSC, its a small world. -- I'm in year nine (in Australia though.) and all of the questions I need for my homework are pretty much written exactly like in the book. hahaha. Is it for science dimentions 3? haha
We know that the alkali metal sodium (Na) will form an ionic bond with the halogen bromine (Br) to create sodium bromide (NaBr). The equation looks like this: Na + Br => NaBr
Yes it is anionic compound because, We know that the alkali metal sodium (Na) will form an ionic bond with the halogen bromine (Br) to create sodium bromide (NaBr). The equation looks like this:Na + Br => NaBr
the symbol of bromine is Br
Br2 + 3NaHSO3 = 2NaBr + NaHSO4 + H2O + 2SO2
The chemical symbol for bromine is Br.
H2SO4+2NaOH------->Na2SO4+H20
Sodium and bromine are chemical elements, not properties; the chemical reaction between sodium and bromine is a chemical process, not a property.