[
US
/ˈbɹoʊˌmin/
]
[ UK /bɹˈɒmaɪn/ ]
[ UK /bɹˈɒmaɪn/ ]
NOUN
- a nonmetallic heavy volatile corrosive dark brown liquid element belonging to the halogens; found in sea water
How To Use bromine In A Sentence
- A is molecular formula C8H10 does not decolorise bromine water but when refluxed with aq, acidified KMnO4 the latter decolorise forming compound B with C7H6O2. Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
- These elements include mercury, bromine, cadmium, indium, thallium, lead, and bismuth.
- Two related xanthines, theobromine and theophylline, are often present in smaller amounts.
- These compounds are more reactive than paraffins or naphthenes and readily combine with other elements such as hydrogen, chlorine, and bromine. Hydrocarbon chemistry
- Dry chlorine, iodine, bromine and fluorine cause little or no corrosion of magnesium at room or slightly elevated temperature.
- The proportion of bromine to other chemically similar elements, like chlorine, varied by a factor of 10 from place to place.
- Methyl xanthines (caffeine, theophylline and theobromine) are found in seeds and leaves of a variety of unrelated plant species, including coffee, tea, cocoa, cola and mate.
- The pharmacophore included a hydrogen bond receptor, a hydrogen bond donor, a hydrophobic area and a phenyl ring with a chlorine or a bromine atom.
- Allenes are prepared by the removal of bromine and hydrogen bromide from 1,2, 3 tribromopropane and its derivatives under the action of potassium hydroxide, zinc, and ethanol.
- Since we had found previously that by adding bromine to the golden (SN) x material, we could increase its conductivity tenfold, we thought that perhaps the impurity in the polyacetylene was acting as a dopant and was actually increasing the conductivity of the polyacetylene, rather than decreasing it. Alan G. MacDiarmid - Autobiography