there is nothing made of bromine but it is used in many things because it is one of the elements with fire resistance properties .
it is used in swimming pool and industrial cooling towers to control algae bacteria and odors .
they are used to protect in the risk of accidential fires in such as computers radios , etc
Bromine exists as a diatomic gas. Thus, there are two moles of bromine atoms in 1 mole of bromine gas.
Bromine is a halogen which can be a gas or liquid depending on the temperature. At room temperature bromine is a liquid metal.
No, Bromine is not brittle at room temperature, as Bromine is one of only two elements in the Periodic Table that is a liquid at room temperature.
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No, bromine exists in nature. It is common in seawater, and in underground aquifers that have been exposed to seawater in the "recent" past.
bromine can be used for an household or industral disinfectant.
Two natural isotopes of bromine are known:- bromine-79: 50,69 %- bromine-81: 49,31 %
Bromine is an element, a pure substance. It is composed of bromine atoms only. Bromine is also diatomic, so it will naturally pair up to be Br2.
NBr2Cl
Bromine and mercury are the two elements that are liquid at room temperature (20oC - 22oC).
Bromine exists as a diatomic gas. Thus, there are two moles of bromine atoms in 1 mole of bromine gas.
Bromine is a naturally occurring element. One of the halides.
Bromine is a halogen which can be a gas or liquid depending on the temperature. At room temperature bromine is a liquid metal.
Bromine is non metal which is liquid.It is halogen.It belongs to group-17.There are only two elements in the periodic table that are non metals. They are bromine and mercury. From those, bromine is the only non metal.There are only two liquid elements in the periodic table. The only non metal liquid is Bromine. Bromine stays as a diatomic molecules.
2Br is two separate bromine atoms. Br2 is a bromine molecule, consisting of two bromine atoms bonded together.
No, Bromine is not brittle at room temperature, as Bromine is one of only two elements in the Periodic Table that is a liquid at room temperature.
If two bromine atoms form a bond with each other, the bond is covalent, not metallic.