Hypobromous Acid
The chemical formula of hypobromous acid is HBrO.
The chemical formula for hydrobromous acid is HBrO. It is a weak acid that contains bromine in its +1 oxidation state.
HBrO is the chemical formula for hypobromous acid. It is weak and unstable. Other names for it are bromonol or bromic acid.
Hydrobromic acid
The conjugate base of an acid is the species we get from from deprotonating it (the conjugate base is usually an anion). If we deprotonate hypobromous acid, HBrO, we can see that the hypobromite ion (BrO-) is the conjugate base. HBrO---> H+ + BrO-
HBro is a covalent compound. It is formed by sharing of electrons between hydrogen and bromine atoms.
HBrO is a weak acid. In solution it partially deprotinates to form BrO- and H+
Formula: HBrO
The conjugate acid of BrO is HBrO, which is formed when BrO accepts a proton (H+). It has one more hydrogen ion than its parent molecule BrO.
In HBrO, the main intermolecular force present is dipole-dipole interactions due to the permanent dipoles in the H-Br and Br-O bonds. Additionally, there may be some hydrogen bonding between hydrogen in HBrO and an electronegative atom in another molecule.
The oxidation number of bromine in aqueous HBrO (hypobromous acid) is +1. This is because in HBrO, oxygen is more electronegative than bromine and will have an oxidation number of -2, leaving bromine with a +1 oxidation state to balance the overall charge of the molecule.
'HBr'. Since bromine is in the same group as chlorine it follows a similar chemical reaction and form similar chemical compounds. Other corresponding acids from the halogen group are HF (Hydrofluoric Acid) HCl (Hydrochloric Acid) HI ( Hydroiodic Acid).