Yes, in water, it dissociates into Mg2+ and 2Cl-
soluble
MgCl2=95grams per mole so 105g/95g is 1.10 mols of MgCl2
MgCl2 Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( 250 ml = 0.250 L ) Get moles MgCl2 80 grams MgCl2 (1 mole MgCl2/95.21 grams) = 0.8402 moles MgCl2 Molarity = 0.8402 moles MgCl2/0.250 Liters = 3.4 M MgCl2 ----------------
The synthesis equation for MgCl2 is Mg + Cl2 -> MgCl2. The decomposition reaction is MgCl2 - heat-> Mg + Cl2.
Since magnesium chloride is highly soluble in water, and Silver Chloride has low solubility in water, try diluting with excess water, and filter out the AgCl.
soluble
Yes.Magnesium chloride is soluble in water.
Magnesium chloride is the name for the chemical compounds with the formulas MgCl2 and its various hydrates MgCl2(H2O)x. These salts are typical ionic halides, being highly soluble in water.
MgCl2 is magnesium chloride.
MgCl2=95grams per mole so 105g/95g is 1.10 mols of MgCl2
MgCl2 Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( 250 ml = 0.250 L ) Get moles MgCl2 80 grams MgCl2 (1 mole MgCl2/95.21 grams) = 0.8402 moles MgCl2 Molarity = 0.8402 moles MgCl2/0.250 Liters = 3.4 M MgCl2 ----------------
The synthesis equation for MgCl2 is Mg + Cl2 -> MgCl2. The decomposition reaction is MgCl2 - heat-> Mg + Cl2.
Since magnesium chloride is highly soluble in water, and Silver Chloride has low solubility in water, try diluting with excess water, and filter out the AgCl.
MgCl2
yes mgcl2 is aqous solution
It's MgCl2, and yes, it is soluble. It's an ionic compound, and ionic compounds are very polar. Water is polar as well, so magnesium chloride easily dissolves in water.
The salts dissolved in water are very different: - in sea water the principal component is NaCl; also MgCl2, CaCl2 - mineral waters contain many types of salts depending on the origin - the same situation for residual waters