Bromine (Br) is not a molecular compound; it is a diatomic molecule, meaning it consists of two bromine atoms bonded together (Br2) in its elemental form. In contrast, molecular compounds typically consist of two or more different elements bonded together. However, bromine can form molecular compounds when it combines with other elements, such as in bromides (e.g., NaBr).
Barium hydroxide is a molecular compound.
Bromine (Br) can form a single covalent bond with a neighboring atom in a compound.
ionic
yes
CO. NaCl is not a molecular compound, because it is ionically bonded.
Sodium Bromide
It is Bromine Br and Phosphorus P, and also known as Phosphorus Pentabromide.
No. Bromine is an element. Br2, dibromine, is the diatomic form of the element. A compound is formed from 2 or more different elements.
MgBr2 is an ionic compound. Magnesium (Mg) is a metal and bromine (Br) is a non-metal, so they form an ionic bond by transferring electrons.
yes and any binary compound that has Cl , F , Br , I is ionic
Molecular
The oxidation level of Br can vary depending on the compound it is in. In the compound HBr, the oxidation level of Br is -1. In Br2, the oxidation level of Br is 0.
Yes. Aspirin is a molecular compound.
No. Since BH3 lacks a lone pair it would be a Lewis acid.
Molecular compound
Oh, dude, like, totally! NH4Br is a molecular compound because it's made up of nonmetals bonding together. It's like a bromine atom hanging out with four hydrogen atoms and a nitrogen atom, forming a cozy little molecule. So yeah, NH4Br is definitely a molecular compound.
H2O is a molecular compound.