It easily evaporates to make suffocating brown fumes.
Are bromine and mercury liquid at room temperature.
Mercury has a special electron configuration that means the bonds between the mercury atoms are much weaker than the bonds of other metals so it s liquid at room temperature instead of solid.
It has a bad smell.
While mercury is the only liquid metal at room temperature the elements gallium cesium and rubidium melt under slightly warmer conditions.
It is the only nonmetal to exist in liquid form at room temperature and one of only two elements the other.
It can become a metal at very high pressures.
So the two liquid elements bromine and mercury have atoms that can move around each other but not disperse at room temperature.
Bromine is a chemical element with the symbol br and atomic number 35.
Liquid elements are rare.
With enough heating or cooling either element can change state.
Only bromine and mercury are liquid at room temperature.
The only other element on the periodic table that is a liquid at room temperature and pressure is the halogen bromine.
If scientists ever synthesize a sufficient quantity of flerovium and copernicium.
Its properties are thus intermediate between those of chlorine and iodine isolated independently by two chemists carl jacob löwig in 1825 and antoine jérôme balard in 1826.
35 bromine is a fairly abundant element but has a rare property.
They are 79 br and 81 br.
It is the third lightest halogen and is a fuming red brown liquid at room temperature that evaporates readily to form a similarly coloured gas.
It has two stable isotopes.
Its name means stench of he goats.
Bromine is a red brown liquid.
Bromine symbol br and atomic number 35 is a reddish brown liquid with a melting point of 265 9 k.
Bromine just happens to have a boiling point above room temperature it s not unusual for its group or anything.