No. Although technically a "salt", Magnesium Sulfate (Epsom Salt in it's Heptahydrate form) will not melt snow or ice.
Sodium, calcium and potassium chlorides are used to melt snow.
Salt is used to lower the freezing point of water. Road services use it to sprinkle the road surface when temparature wiill drop below 1 degree Celsius.
Well the main difference between the two is that they are totally different compounds. Magnesium sulfate has derivatives of sulfur and oxygen when magnesisum chloride is a derivitive of chlorine. Magnesium sulfate has a polyatomic ion (sulfate); magnesium chloride is made of a cation and an anion. In the magnesium sulfate, the magnesium and the sulfate ion cancel the charges so the both have a charge of 0. In magnesium chloride, the magnesium cation has a charge of 0 while the chloride anion has a charge of 2-.As for the uses of salts in agriculture, MgSO4 is often encountered as the heptahydrate epsomite (MgSO4·7H2O), commonly called Epsom salt. In agriculture and gardening, magnesium sulfate is used to correct magnesium deficiency in soil, since magnesium is an essential element in the chorophyll molecule. It is most commonly applied to potted plants, or to magnesium-hungry crops, such as potatoes, roses, tomatoes, peppers and cannabis. The advantage of magnesium sulfate over other magnesium soil amendments (such as dolomitic lime) is its high solubility.As for the magnesium chloride, its uses include using for dust and erosion control and for experimenting anti lipid effects in animals.
Epsom salt (or colloquially usually "epsom salts") is an old-fashioned name for magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
It depends on the rule you use to classify it. Magnesium Sulfide is ionic, if using the metal-nonmetal rule. It is polar covalent, if using the 1.7 electronegativity difference rule. Both these rules are generalizations.
Epsom salt (magnesium sulfate heptahydrate) and calcium chloride (sold as DampRid).
If you needed to use powered copper 2 sulfate in an experiment and were only supplied with clumps of copper 2 sulfate which tool would you need to convert the copper sulfate to usable form?
Well the main difference between the two is that they are totally different compounds. Magnesium sulfate has derivatives of sulfur and oxygen when magnesisum chloride is a derivitive of chlorine. Magnesium sulfate has a polyatomic ion (sulfate); magnesium chloride is made of a cation and an anion. In the magnesium sulfate, the magnesium and the sulfate ion cancel the charges so the both have a charge of 0. In magnesium chloride, the magnesium cation has a charge of 0 while the chloride anion has a charge of 2-.As for the uses of salts in agriculture, MgSO4 is often encountered as the heptahydrate epsomite (MgSO4·7H2O), commonly called Epsom salt. In agriculture and gardening, magnesium sulfate is used to correct magnesium deficiency in soil, since magnesium is an essential element in the chorophyll molecule. It is most commonly applied to potted plants, or to magnesium-hungry crops, such as potatoes, roses, tomatoes, peppers and cannabis. The advantage of magnesium sulfate over other magnesium soil amendments (such as dolomitic lime) is its high solubility.As for the magnesium chloride, its uses include using for dust and erosion control and for experimenting anti lipid effects in animals.
magnesium chloride
Epsom Salt chemical formula = MgSO4-7H20 use this linc to Wiki for Magnesium Sulphate http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnesium_sulfate or another good one (or better) is http://curezone.com/forums/FM.asp?i=61985 Dave e.
You must state the purpose of using MgSO4.
Epsom salt (or colloquially usually "epsom salts") is an old-fashioned name for magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
Anhydric Magnesium sulphate can be used as a drying agent for wet organic solvents or solutions of organic compounds in organic solvents. It dries faster than the commonly used anhydric calcium chloride.
It depends on the rule you use to classify it. Magnesium Sulfide is ionic, if using the metal-nonmetal rule. It is polar covalent, if using the 1.7 electronegativity difference rule. Both these rules are generalizations.
We use it as an abrasive to remove hard water deposits. Can't think of any other reason.
Examples: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, sodium hydrogen carbonate, sodium citrate, potassium permanganate, magnesium sulfate etc.
To melt the ice and snow and to give your tires grip on the road.
Epsom salt (magnesium sulfate heptahydrate) and calcium chloride (sold as DampRid).
Expeditions on Mount Everest do not take any water with them. They melt the snow and ice that is on the mountain to use as there water.