If it's a non-metal and non-metal, it is a colvalent bond. If it's metal and non-metal or metal and metal, then it is ionic. Magnesium Sulfate (MgSO4 / Magnesium + Sulfate) is IONICbecause it is a metal and non-metal but it has a convalent bond in it, which is SO4 (Sulfur + Oxygen).
If it's a non-metal and non-metal, it is a colvalent bond. If it's metal and non-metal or metal and metal, then it is ionic. Magnesium Sulfate (MgSO4 / Magnesium + Sulfate) is IONICbecause it is a metal and non-metal but it has a convalent bond in it, which is SO4 (Sulfur + Oxygen).
Magnesium sulfate is a compound, and the terms metal a nonmetal do not apply to it.
Yes. It contains magnesium, which is a metal.
In Chemistry, a salt is any compound composed of a metal and a non-metal. What people commonly refer to as "salt" or table salt is Sodium chloride (a metal, sodium, and a non-metal chloride). There are thousands of salts out there, in addition to table salt. Epsom salt is magnesium sulfate.
Magnesium is a metal
Yes. The magnesium metal replaces the copper in the copper sulfate. This is a single replacement or single displacement reaction.
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 is also known as magnesium sulfate. The metal that is used to make these salts is magnesium. Magnesium is an earthy alkaline metal.
Basalt is a dark fine-grained volcanic rock, and is basically non-metal compared to metal bearing ores.Basalt consists largely of olivine and pyroxene (both magnesium-iron silicates), feldspar (calcium-aluminium silicate), and ilmenite (iron-titanium oxide).
Magnesium.
Magnesium Sulfate [ MgSO4 ] ... also known as Epsom Salts Magnesium Oxide [ MgO ] ... Used in metal alloys