Magnesium, nitrogen and oxygen are mainly what Magnesium nitrate is made up of. The formula is Mg(NO3)2.
NaNO3 -Sodium -Nitrogen -Oxygen
There are 6 moles of nitrate ions in 2 moles of magnesium nitrate. This is because there are 3 nitrate ions (NO3-) in each formula unit of magnesium nitrate (Mg(NO3)2). So, 2 moles of Mg(NO3)2 would contain 6 moles of nitrate ions.
magnesium is an element, not a molecule. It only contains magnesium
magnesium is an element, not a molecule. It only contains magnesium
Yes, magnesium reacts with copper nitrate to form magnesium nitrate and copper. The reaction involves the displacement of copper from the copper nitrate solution by magnesium.
Mg(NO3)2 is called magnesium nitrate. You do not use the prefix di for the nitrate since this is an ionic compound, and it can only be (NO3)2 as nitrate has a -1 charge and Mg has a +2 charge.
They could, since magnesium is more reactive than copper, and could displace it to form magnesium nitrate.
You don't: Magnesium nitrate is already neutral!
Element 12 is magnesium. Household items that contain a salt of magnesium include Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate) for baths, milk of magnesia (magnesium hydroxide) for digestive purposes, and some multivitamin supplements that contain magnesium salts.
Each atom of the element magnesium contains exactly 12 protons.
Mg(NO3)2 {note correct case for "O"} is not an element at all. Instead it is a compound of three elements, magnesium, nitrogen, and oxygen.
When magnesium is mixed with copper nitrate, a single displacement reaction occurs. The magnesium will displace the copper in the copper nitrate, forming magnesium nitrate and copper metal. This reaction is also a redox reaction as magnesium is oxidized and copper is reduced.