MgCl2 and Li are the reactants.
It is inverse.
Assuming a idealized double displacement reaction. 2LiCl + Mg(OH)2 --> MgCl2 + 2LiOH
Lithium is more reactive to water than magnesium because while Lithium will explode and generally destroy the container it is in, magnesium will cause the water to violently bubble.
Magnesium Sulfate: MgSO4 Lithium Bromite: LiBrO2
Calcium. The first two are beryllium and magnesium.
The elements that make up magnesium phosphide are: - Sodium (Na) - Hydrogen (H) - Lithium (Li) - Potassium (K) - Magnesium (Mg) - Manganese Chloride Compound - Chromium (Cr) - Sulfur (S) Hope this helps.
No.
Magnesium has a higher melting point.
Lithium
Yes, it does.
Out of these metals, lithium has the strongest bonds. Aluminum has the weakest bonds and magnesium has somewhat strong bonds.
Magnesium dioxide MgO2 is a peroxide, Mg2+ O22-. It is reactive and has no uses as a catalyst. Magnesium oxide MgO doped with lithium has been repoerted as being a Yes, catalyst in the reaction of oxidative dimirization of methane. Manganese dioxide has uses as a catalyst.