hello sA lht ng tgA cAvItE At lAlo nA sa AmAyA schOoL Of hOmE indUstrIes
hI ghycElL MaPaPatay kO dIn kAyO nI angElIca peo tAngA ka kAsI Eh bOba..............................
The difference is magnesium oxide contains oxide ions ,whereas aluminium oxide doesn't.
the obvious difference is that one has calcium, and the other magnesium.
Magnesium oxide is MgO and magnesium sulfate is MgSO4. Two completely different compounds.
Magnesium oxide will react with water to form Magnesium Hydroxide. Magnesium Hydroxide will not reat further with water
Magnesium is just an element. Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) is a compound which contains the element magnesium.
You probably think to anhydrous magnesium carbonate and hydrated magnesium carbonates: MgCO3, MgCO3.2H2O, MgCO3.3H2O, MgCO3.5H2O
The difference in electronegativity between the two atoms is above 1.7, Magnesium is a metal, and chlorine is a nonmetal.
Chelate means 'to bond', so the chelated magnesium has been bonded with something.
Yes, manganese and magnesium are two different elements
Magnesium and sulfur are much more likely than nitrogen and oxygen to form an ionic bond, because the difference in electronegativity between sulfur and magnesium is much greater than the difference in electronegativity between nitrogen and oxygen. Another way of phrasing the reason is that magnesium is a metal and sulfur a nonmetal, while nitrogen and oxygen are both nonmetals.
Yes, magnesium chloride and methane are both covalent substances. Magnesium chloride has a covalent bond between magnesium and chloride ions, while methane has covalent bonds between carbon and hydrogen atoms.
Mg is the symbol for the element magnesium and could be used to represent a neutral atom of magnesium. Mg2- does not occur, but Mg2+ does, and is the symbol of a magnesium ion, which is a magnesium atom that has lost two electrons.