Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) is a common magnesium salt.
It is best known as Epsom salt.
Magnesium don't react with salt.
Magnesium is a metal located in the group 2 of the periodic table. Therefore, it forms salts from the reactions with acids. For example, magnesium forms magnesium chloride with hydrochloric acid solution.
Magnesium bromide is a salt, not a base. It is formed by the reaction between magnesium oxide (a base) and hydrobromic acid to produce magnesium bromide and water.
Magnesium nitrate (salt) and water are produced.
Epsom salt is hydrated magnesium sulfate - MgSO4.7H2O.
Magnesium oxide is a salt, but nitric acid isn't, and I don't believe that you would get a salt by mixing these two substances. Perhaps you meant to ask what salt is produced by mixing magnesium hydroxide and nitric acid; in that case you would produce the salt magnesium nitrate.
Magnesium chloride is a salt.
The salt formed when magnesium reacts with nitric acid is magnesium nitrate.
To answer you question yes a Saltigem can run Magnesium Salt. Infact all salt chlorinators can run Magnesium.
Neither, MgCl2 is to be considered a neutral salt.
You cannot create salt from magnesium ribbon. Salt is a compound made of sodium and chloride ions, whereas magnesium ribbon is a metallic element. They are different chemical substances with distinct properties and compositions.
The molecular formula of magnesium sulfate is MgSO4. It is also called Epsom salt or bitter salt.