when chlorine is added to sodium bromide solution, the mixture turns orange. what type of reaction has taken place?
The reaction is a displacement (halogen displacement) reaction , which is also a redox reaction.
What happens in this reaction
- Chlorine (Cl2Cl_2Cl2) is more reactive than bromine, so it displaces bromide ions from sodium bromide solution.
- The ionic equation is: Cl2+2Br−→2Cl−+Br2Cl_2+2Br^-\rightarrow 2Cl^-+Br_2Cl2+2Br−→2Cl−+Br2. This shows bromide ions being oxidised to bromine and chlorine being reduced to chloride.
- The orange/brown colour comes from bromine (Br2Br_2Br2) formed in solution.
Type of reaction (exam-style wording)
In exam or textbook language, this process is typically described as:
- A displacement reaction (more reactive chlorine displaces bromine from sodium bromide).
- Also a redox reaction , because electron transfer occurs between chlorine and bromide ions.
So the best short answer to “what type of reaction has taken place?” is: a halogen displacement reaction (a type of redox reaction).