Asked by Tanya
One molecule of bromine (Br2) and two molecules of potassium (KCl) chloride combine in a reaction. How many atoms are in the product?
Answers
Answered by
PsyDAG
Br2 = 2 Br atoms
K and Cl are each atoms
K and Cl are each atoms
Answered by
Jessie
So basically 4?
Answered by
lego
its 4 guys. and not everybody knows all the answers lmao, calm down.
Answered by
Dog
No it is six I promise
Answered by
:|
it was six.
Answered by
Connor
Their are two molecules of potassium chloride so it’s not 4 it’s 6
Answered by
Anonymous
Br2= One B two r 2Br= two br atoms idiot
Answered by
ribeiro
THE ANSWER IS SIX
in the reaction between 1 molecule of bromine and 2 molecules of potassium chloride there are SIX ATOMS in the products.
in the reaction between 1 molecule of bromine and 2 molecules of potassium chloride there are SIX ATOMS in the products.
Answered by
Anonymous
why yall gotta b confusing like that
Answered by
I’m not stinky you are🖕
Lol did he just call that other dude an idiot🤣
Answered by
M
It is 6 because
1 molecule of Br2 is 2 atoms
2 molecules of KCl (the last letter is a lowercase L it confused me) is 4 atoms
the product would have 6 atoms
1 molecule of Br2 is 2 atoms
2 molecules of KCl (the last letter is a lowercase L it confused me) is 4 atoms
the product would have 6 atoms
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.