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Reactive nonmetals

Bromine

A reddish-brown halogen that is liquid at room temperature.

Atomic #35Mass79.904Blockp-blockPeriod4Group17
Br35 · 79.904
3D Atom Explorer

Inside the Bromine atom

Switch between Bohr and Quantum Cloud modes to compare a simple teaching model with a more realistic probability-based view, and follow the guided tour to explore the Bromine atom step by step.

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Electron configuration

[Ar] 3d10 4s2 4p5

A neutral Bromine atom has 35 electrons (equal to its proton count). Choosing a different isotope above changes only the neutron count.

Shell distribution

Shell 12 e⁻Shell 28 e⁻Shell 318 e⁻Shell 47 e⁻

Electrons fill inner shells before outer ones; the outermost (valence) shell drives the element's chemistry.

Properties

Physical & atomic properties

State (room temp)
Liquid
Melting point
266 K (-7 °C)
Boiling point
332 K (59 °C)
Density
3.122 g/cm³
Electronegativity
2.96 Pauling
Atomic radius
115 pm
1st ionization energy
1140 kJ/mol
Category
Reactive nonmetals
History

Discovery & naming

Discovered
1826
Discovered by
Antoine Jérôme Balard
Origin of name
Greek 'bromos', meaning stench.

Notable uses

Flame retardants, photographic film, and dyes.

Cosmic origin

Where Bromine comes from

Several comparable sources

Both slow neutron capture in dying stars and rapid capture in explosive events contribute meaningfully.

Simplified origin map — many elements form through more than one astrophysical pathway.

Summary

Atomic number
35
Atomic mass
79.904
Category
Reactive nonmetals
Group · Period
17 · 4
Block
p-block
Shells
2 · 8 · 18 · 7