Polar- chlorine and bromine have different electronegativities.
Electrons are shared between these two atoms.
covalent bond
A covalent bond; chlorine is found as Cl2.
A covalent bond is typical for compounds between nonmetals.
PCl5 is covalent in the vapour phase with a trigonal biyramidal shape. It is ionic in the solid consisting of PCl4+ PCl6- In solution it can be covalent or ionic depending on the solvent.
BrCl is a covalent compound because it is formed between two nonmetals (bromine and chlorine) that share electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
No, Bromine trichloride (BrCl3) is a covalent compound because it is formed by sharing electrons between bromine and chlorine atoms rather than transferring electrons as in ionic compounds.
The bond formed between the bromine atoms in a bromine molecule is a covalent bond. In a covalent bond, the atoms share a pair of electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Yes. a covalent bond is formed between carbon and chlorine.
A covalent bond is formed between nitrogen and bromine in compounds such as nitrogen tribromide (NBr3). Nitrogen shares electrons with bromine to achieve a stable electron configuration, resulting in the formation of a strong covalent bond.
a molecular bond will be formed as both, carbon and bromine are non metals
A polar covalent bond is formed between hydrogen and chlorine. This bond is formed by the unequal sharing of electrons, with chlorine attracting the electrons more strongly than hydrogen.
Covalent. Non-metals tend to share electrons
HBro is a covalent compound. It is formed by sharing of electrons between hydrogen and bromine atoms.
Yes, a Bromine atom can bond to another similar Bromine atom, to make a Bromine molecule: Br2
yes, because it is combination between 2 nonmetals
Electrons are shared between these two atoms.