No, both Nitrogen(N) and Bromine(Br) are non-metals. Therefore they must be covalent formed by the sharing of electrons. N forms a single bond with each of the Br atoms.
NBr3 is a covalent compound. It consists of nonmetals (N and Br) which typically form covalent bonds by sharing electrons.
NBr3 Covalent
NBr3 is the chemical formula for nitrogen bromide
The reaction between liquid bromine (Br2) and nitrogen gas (N2) yields nitrogen tribromide (NBr3) formula. The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is: 3 Br2 + N2 -> 2 NBr3
No, NBr3 (nitrogen tribromide) is not soluble in water due to its nonpolar nature and lack of an ionic structure required for water solubility.