Yes, the ion bromide (Br-) is an anion.
Br is an anion. It is called bromide and is the ion form of the element bromine.
Bromide is the name of the bromine anion (Br-)
The bromine ion is referred to as bromide, and it is Br^-
Options are not given in the question. But the following species will have the same electronic configuration as Br- ion: Neutral atom: Kr Cations: Rb+, Sr2+ Anion: Se2-
An anion is named using the base element with an -ide suffix. Ex: Br- (Bromine anion) is named bromide sulfur- sulfide, ect.
Br is an anion. It is called bromide and is the ion form of the element bromine.
Potassium bromide, KBr: K+ - cation, Br- - anion
The formula of the anion in sodium bromide is Br^-. Sodium bromide is composed of the sodium cation (Na^+) and the bromide anion (Br^-), which combine in a 1:1 ratio to form the compound NaBr.
Bromide is the name of the bromine anion (Br-)
Anions carry negative charges, Br-
BR Ambedkar is often referred to as Babasaheb.
The OH^- anion is referred to as hydoxyl, hydroxide, hydroxy, etc.
Br- is chemical symbol for a bromide anion. It is not an 'equation', it can be a part of a chemical equation, like in this precipitation reaction (example) Ag+(aq) + Br-(aq) --> AgBr(s) .
anion. bromine is a non metal which gains an electron making it negative.
Cs and Br form an ionic bond in CsBr compound. Cesium (Cs) is a metal that loses an electron to become a cation, while bromine (Br) is a nonmetal that gains an electron to become an anion. The electrostatic attraction between the oppositely charged ions leads to the formation of an ionic bond.
No. The Se ion will be larger than the Br ion. The more negative the anion's charge, the larger the radius (more electrons = stronger repulsion between the electrons; so, more distance between them). Se would become "Se2-" as an anion, and Br would become "Br1-". Because Se's "2-" anion charge is more negative than Br's "1-" anion charge, and because Se would have more relative electrons to protons than Br, there is more repulsion between electrons, and distance, within the Se ion. So, the Se ion has a larger radius. Hope it helps.
Aluminium cation is 3+; bromide anion is Br-. The aluminium bromide is AlBr3.