That would be Bromide.
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).
Bromine molecules travel as diatomic molecules (Br2) due to the nature of their chemical bonding. Each bromine atom shares one electron with another bromine atom, forming a stable covalent bond that makes the diatomic molecule more stable than individual bromine atoms. This diatomic form is prevalent in its gaseous and liquid states, allowing bromine to exist in nature primarily as Br2. Additionally, this molecular form helps bromine efficiently participate in chemical reactions.
CBr4 is a molecular compound because it consists of nonmetallic elements (carbon and bromine) bonded together through covalent bonds. Ionic compounds typically form between a metal and a nonmetal, with electrons being transferred rather than shared.
Nitrogen and bromine form a covalent bond when they combine. In this bond, nitrogen typically shares three of its electrons with bromine, resulting in the formation of nitrogen tribromide (NBr₃). This compound features strong covalent interactions due to the sharing of electrons between the two elements, allowing for stable molecular formation.
The chemical symbol for the element bromine is Br. The elemental form of bromine is theoretically in the diatomic form (Br2), but it is not found in that form freely. Most of the bromine on earth exist as bromide salts in crustal rock.Chemical symbol for stable bromine is Br2. The state of matter of it is liquid. It is red-brown in colour.
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).
Bromine is a diatomic liquid under normal conditions with a molecular formula of Br2
Molecular chlorine (Cl2) reacts with sodium bromide (NaBr) to form molecular bromine (Br2) and sodium chloride (NaCl) in a redox reaction. The chlorine is reduced from Cl2 to Cl- and the bromine is oxidized from Br- to Br2.
No. Bromine is an element. Br2, dibromine, is the diatomic form of the element. A compound is formed from 2 or more different elements.
Bromine (molecular Br2) is an covalent compound
2 atoms of Bromine[Br] are in Molecular Bromine(Br2)
BrO2 is a molecular compound. It consists of bromine and oxygen atoms bonded together using covalent bonds to form a molecule.
SBr6 is a molecular compound because it is composed of nonmetal atoms (sulfur and bromine) sharing electrons to form covalent bonds.
Yes and No, because Barium has two valence electrons and Bromine has 7, which would add up to 9 valence electrons when you can only have 8 if you want to be positively charged, so naturally they would not bond with each other. If they did end up bonding somehow, they would be negatively charged with 1 valence electron and only then could that be bonded with another Bromine atom.
No, elemental Bromine or Br2 is not an ion
When bromine and sodium combine, they react to form sodium bromide. This is a salt that is water soluble and a common source of bromine in various chemical applications. The reaction between bromine and sodium is a redox reaction where sodium loses an electron to bromine.
Bromine is a diatomic liquid under normal conditions with a molecular formula of Br2