Magnesium!!
Magnesium, because the reaction between this element and the acid already occurred, so if we try to react them again there would be no change.
Magnesium is a metal with a very low electronegativity, and only a metal with an even lower electronegativity would react with magnesium nitrate. That would be lithium.
Any metal that is higher than magnesium in the reactivity series will react with magnesium nitrate, this is a displacement reaction.
There is a lot of disagreement of wether berylium reacts with nitrate acid. it has a strong oxide laye (abit like alluminum)wich slows reactions down until removed.
They could, since magnesium is more reactive than copper, and could displace it to form magnesium nitrate.
No.
Yes, aluminum is more electronegative than magnesium thus, resulting in a single displacement reaction. The products would be magnesium + aluminumnitrate
SPLAAASHH
Magnesium and iron are both more electromotive then zinc, so zinc can't displace them in a compound.
They could, since magnesium is more reactive than copper, and could displace it to form magnesium nitrate.
No.
Magnesium react with nitric acid and magnesium nitrate is obtained.
Most metals will react with nitrate ion forming the corresponding metal nitrates.
yes they do. and magnesium chloride and nitric acid are formed
No, as magnesium is more reactive, and would 'keep' the nitrate.
no, it wouldn't calcium is above magnesium in the reactivity series which means that magnesium can't oxidize calcium. calcium can oxidize magnesium so calcium would react with magnesium nitrate with formation of metallic magnesium and calciumnitrate.
Magnesium metal and Zinc Nitrate react according to the equation: Mg(s) + Zn(NO3)2(aq) --> Mg(NO3)2(aq) + Zn(s) written ionically as: Mg(s) + Zn2+(aq) --> Mg2+(aq) + Zn(s) This is a typical metal displacement reaction
magnesium is more reactive than copper so,it displaces copper from its salt solution.
as a displacement reaction has to occur when the metal is higher in the reactivity series thatn the metal in the salt. With your question this is not the case as sodium is higher than magnesium and so nothing will take effect.
No. Lead isn't an active metal as magnesium.
gold will not react with lead nitrate because gold is the least reactive metal- it hardly reacts with anything