Sodium is more reactive than either magnesium or iron.
In this reaction, sodium metal will replace iron in the iron chloride, forming sodium chloride and iron metal. This is an example of a single displacement reaction, where a more reactive element displaces a less reactive element in a compound.
In a short answer No. But I can't really explain why.
Magnesium is more reactive than iron. Magnesium reacts more readily with oxygen and water to form compounds like magnesium oxide and magnesium hydroxide compared to iron.
No, magnesium is not a ferrous metal. Ferrous metals contain iron, while magnesium is a chemical element that is a lightweight and highly reactive metal.
No, as magnesium is more reactive, and would 'keep' the nitrate.
Sodium is more reactive than iron because sodium has a higher tendency to lose electrons and form ions compared to iron. Sodium reacts vigorously with water and air, while iron reacts more slowly under normal conditions.
Sodium is by far the most reactive. It self ignites in air (it is stored in oil), reacts vigorously with water (releasing hydrogen) and reacts explosively in acids-even dilute. But the most reactive metal is Cesium and the most reactive non-metal is Flourine Cesium and H20 will explode...
sodium, calcium, magnesium, aluminium, zinc, iron, tin and led are metals more reactive than hydrogen.
no... Reactivity Table: Lithium, Potassium, Sodium, Calcium, Magnesium, Aluminum, Zinc, Cadmium, Iron, Nickel, Tin, Lead, Arsenic, Antimony, Copper, Mercury, Silver Platinum, and Gold.
Oxygen silicon aluminum iron calcium sodium potassium magnesium
Sodium is more reactive than iron(It is above iron in the raectivity series). In fact , it is so reactive that it catches fire when exposed to air.It is stored dipped in kerosene oil.
Copper cannot displace metals that are more reactive than itself. Examples include Sodium, Aluminum, Iron, Magnesium, etc.