"Chlorine has two isotopes with mass number 35 and 37. Combination of chlorine with bromine produces BrCl. An examination of the product BrCl molecules shows the presence of only three isotopically different types of molecules with approximate masses of 114, 116, and 118 amu. Based on this information, how many isotopes of Br exist and what are the mass numbers of the isotopes?"
My method:
Take the 3 mass number of BrCl and subtract both mass numbers of Cl from each. This gives six results:
114 (BrCl) - 35 (Cl) = 79; 116 (BrCl) - 35 (Cl) = 81; 118 (BrCl) - 35 (Cl) = 83
114 (BrCl) - 37(Cl) = 77; 116 (BrCl) - 37(Cl) = 79; 118 (BrCl) - 37(Cl) = 81
So I got 4 isotopes of Br with mass numbers 77, 79, 81, 83
The book says 2 isotopes for Br: 79 and 81
I would like to know how to figure this if anyone could offer a suggestion.
Is the rule of thumb to multiply the isotopes of one element times the isotopes of the other element?
In my method, I came up with 2 matching sets, 79 and 81.