I always thought that it would as chlorine is more reactive it would displace the naturally brown bromine colour and turn pale green, but if i'm right in thinking now after watching the videos, it is because the iodine is displaced that it will turn orange...
Thanks Sonny
woah!
mindblown....
Tnx a lot sir ....this vdo really help me a lot
Superb sir..
I always thought that it would as chlorine is more reactive it would displace the naturally brown bromine colour and turn pale green, but if i'm right in thinking now after watching the videos, it is because the iodine is displaced that it will turn orange...
i wanted to ask why the brown color of iodine changed to violet when we put the organic solvent and shook the test tube?
London forces are weak, that's why
Thanks a lot
Super sir👍
Phenol with FeCl3.
Inorganic 👍👍
The ions are getting oxidised and the chlorine water is getting reduced?
Cl2 gets reduced to Cl- and Br- gets oxidised to Br2. Na+ is the spectator.
Um beijo pros BR que tem que ver esse vídeo e não entendeu nada
os cara bota vídeo em ingles britanico ainda so pra sacanear
Bromide is faster reactant than chlorine
2nd
Espelho, espelho meu, existe alguém mais atrasado do que eu?
sim, eu kkkk
@@handembergsantosleal1132 será mesmo?
@@guilhermefonte-boadeolivei225 putz, ganhei hehe