Yes. Acetylene is unsaturated with a triple bond joining the carbon atoms. The reaction is
HCCH + 2Br2 -> Br2HCCHBr2
The bromine adds accross the triple bond, leaving a single carbon carbon bond.
CH (triple bond) CH + Br2 -> BrC (triple bond) CBr
You can test if a compound reacts with bromine by adding bromine water to the compound. If the compound reacts with bromine, the characteristic reddish-brown color of the bromine water will fade as it reacts with the compound. This reaction is often used to test for the presence of unsaturated bonds in organic compounds.
Aluminum metal reacts with bromine gas to form aluminum bromide. This is a redox reaction where aluminum is oxidized and bromine is reduced. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is 2Al + 3Br2 -> 2AlBr3.
Bromomethane CHBr3 and Hydrogen Bromide HBr
Hexane and benzene do not react in the ignition test. Only acetylene does. Acetylene has a triple bond if equivalent amount of KMnO4 is used. The equation is HCCH + KMnO4 -> HC (OH) = CH(OH).
CH (triple bond) CH + Br2 -> BrC (triple bond) CBr
When acetylene is bubbled through bromine water, the unsaturated acetylene undergoes a reaction with bromine (a halogen) to form a dihalogenated compound, bromoethylene. This reaction is an addition reaction where two bromine atoms add across the carbon-carbon triple bond in acetylene to form the product. The bromine water, which is originally orange-brown in color, will decolorize as the reaction proceeds.
Ethanol does not react with bromine.
Yes, bromine reacts with air to form bromine vapors. Bromine reacts with oxygen present in the air to form bromine oxides.
The chemical reaction is:C2H2 + Br2 = CHBr=CHBr
violently. does that need clarification?
You can test if a compound reacts with bromine by adding bromine water to the compound. If the compound reacts with bromine, the characteristic reddish-brown color of the bromine water will fade as it reacts with the compound. This reaction is often used to test for the presence of unsaturated bonds in organic compounds.
The chemical equation is:C2H2 + 2 Br2 = C2Br2H4
awdasdasda
Aluminum metal reacts with bromine gas to form aluminum bromide. This is a redox reaction where aluminum is oxidized and bromine is reduced. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is 2Al + 3Br2 -> 2AlBr3.
Yes, ethyne (acetylene) can react with bromine to form 1,2-dibromoethane. This is an addition reaction where the bromine atoms add across the carbon-carbon triple bond in ethyne.
Bromomethane CHBr3 and Hydrogen Bromide HBr