Magnesium is a solid metal at room temperature; it does have a liquid phase (pretty much everything does, at the right combination of temperature and pressure) but in order to obtain liquid magnesium you would have to heat it in the absence of oxygen (or water) since it will otherwise burn up rather than melt, when it is heated.
Liquid calcium magnesium is a combination of two important minerals in a more easily absorbed form. There is information on the pros and cons of using liquid calcium magnesium on the LIVESTRONG website.
When magnesium is heated, it undergoes a chemical reaction with oxygen in the air, resulting in the release of a gas called magnesium oxide (MgO).
Magnesium is in the state of a solid form.
Titanium is refined from it's ore using liquid Magnesium.
No, Magnesium oxide (MgO), or magnesia, is a white hygroscopic solid mineral.
Molten magnesium is still metallic magnesium. It is in liquid state.
At room temperature magnesium is a solid.
You would just call it liquid magnesium, or molten magnesium which means the same thing.
Liquid calcium magnesium is a combination of two important minerals in a more easily absorbed form. There is information on the pros and cons of using liquid calcium magnesium on the LIVESTRONG website.
No, Magnesium is a solid metal, melting at 922 K.
Charlie
When magnesium is heated, it undergoes a chemical reaction with oxygen in the air, resulting in the release of a gas called magnesium oxide (MgO).
Dissolve magnesium mass with nitric acid, then evaporate/boil the liquid away
Magnesium is in the state of a solid form.
Because the magnesium is a 'solid' and the permanganate is a 'liquid'
yes
Magnesium is a solid at room temperature.The only metal that is a liquid at room temperature is Mercury.