Mg3N2
No, in order to be an organic compound it has to contain the element carbon, as well as hydrogen, oxygen and/or nitrogen. Magnesium chloride contains none of them, so it is not considered to be an organic compound.
Yes, they form Sodium nitride Na3N.
Magnesium - Mg Nitrogen - N although this is only a single atom. It is found as N2 typically which is two Nitrogen atoms bonded together through a triple covalent bond.
3Mg + N2 --> Mg3N2Mg3N2-----------formulaMagnesium nitride===============name of compound
magnesium oxide + nitrogen >>> magnesium nitrite
Yes, aluminum is more electronegative than magnesium thus, resulting in a single displacement reaction. The products would be magnesium + aluminumnitrate
Magnesium oxide, MgO, is the main product but there will also be traces of magnesium nitride, Mg3N2. Magnesium is unusual it will burn in pure nitrogen. 2Mg + O2 -->2 MgO 3Mg + N2 --> Mg3N2
magnesium nitride (Mg3N2) is formed upon heating magnesium and nitrogen.
The convention of adding number prefixes such as di- and tri- to a compound's name is generally reserved for covalent compounds (carbon dioxide, nitrogen trichloride). Magnesium bromide is an ionic compound, so a different naming convention applies.
No, magnesium can continue tor burn in nitrogen to form magnesium nitride, Mg3N2
Magnesium nitride is formed when magnesium powder is burned in the presence of nitrogen gas.
While nitrogen is usually fairly inert, magnesium is so reactive that even nitrogen can react with it.