Magnesium, Mg, is a metal and sodium sulfate is a white powdery, soluble salt.
They don't react with each other, so nothing is changed or produced.
No. Sodium lauryl sulfate will not form insoluble salts with the magnesium.
It was sodium Sulfate!
A white precipitate reaction
Add something that magnesium will form an insoluble compound with. Sodium sulfate or potassium carbonate, maybe.
I don't know, but I'm doing this problem too right now
No. Sodium lauryl sulfate will not form insoluble salts with the magnesium.
calcium, chloride, phosphorus, potassium, sodium, sulfate, and magnesium
Sodium chloride is NaCl.Epsom salt is magnesium sulfate - MgSO4.7H2O.
No, these salts are not interchangeable.
1. Toothpaste may contain salts as sodium chloride, sodium fluoride, sodium lauryl sulfate, sodium pyrophosphate etc. 2. Bath salts contain sodium chloride, magnesium sulfate, borax, sodium bicarbonate etc.
Salt (sodium chloride) is NaCl. Magnesium sulfate is MgSO4.7H2O. Salt has face-centered cubic structure. MgSO4.7H2O (as epsomite) has an orthorombic structure.
It was sodium Sulfate!
Examples are: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, ammonium chloride, ammonium phosphates, sodium carbonate, sodium sulfate, magnesium sulfate, cooper sulfate, magnesium chloride.
yes
There are four basic types of chemical reactions. In this case, when sodium reacts with magnesium sulfate to form sodium sulfate plus magnesium, it is a single replacement reaction.
The ingredient list says Pyrithione zinc, water, sodium laureth sulfate, sodium lauryl sulfate, cocamide MEA, zinc carbonate, glycol distearate, dimethicone, fragrance, cetyl alcohol, guar hydroxypropyltrimonium chloride, magnesium sulfate, sodium benzoate, magnesium carbonate hydroxide, ammonium laureth sulfate, benzyl alcohol, sodium chloride, methylchloroisothiazolinone, methylisothiazolinone, sodium xylenesulfonate, blue 1, red 4.
The four MAIN IONS in seawater in descending order of abundance are: CI: Chloride Na: Sodium SO4: Sulfate Mg: magnesium Found in Leckie-Yuretich: Investigating the Ocean, Page 114, Seawater Salinity: The salt of the Ocean