asked 113k views
3 votes
In the reaction between bromine and sodium, a bromine atom gains an electron. What ion is formed? Is the bromine oxidized, or is it reduced?

asked
User Imcc
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7.7k points

2 Answers

2 votes

Ion formed for bromine = Br-

And it's reduced in that case as it gained an electron

answered
User JuicyFruit
by
9.0k points
4 votes

Answer: The ion formed after the reduction of bromine is
Br^-

Step-by-step explanation:

The electronic configuration of Sodium (Na) =
[Ne]3s^1

The electronic configuration of Bromine (Br) =
[Ar]3d^(10)4s^24p^5

From the above configurations, Sodium ion will loose 1 electron in order to gain stable electronic configuration and that electron is accepted by the Bromine atom because it is 1 electron short of the stable electronic configuration.


Na\rightarrow Na^++e^- (oxidation reaction)


Br+e^-\rightarrow Br^- (Reduction reaction)

Bromine atom is reduced to form
Br^-

Reduction reactions are the reactions in which the element gain electrons.

Oxidation reactions are the reactions in which the element looses its electrons.

answered
User Edwardsbean
by
8.5k points
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