There are at least two "magnesium phosphates", but the most common one has the formula Mg3(PO4)2.
The systematic name of this compound is Magnesium Phosphate.
2Na3PO4 + 3MgCl2 = 6NaCl + Mg3(PO4)2
Formula: Mg3(PO3)2
Sodium phosphate.
The compound formed by magnesium and oxygen is called magnesium oxide.
Mg has a +2 charge and Cl has a -1 charge.The correct formula is MgCl2
Magnesium Bromide
Sn3(PO4)2
Sodium phosphate.
The compound formed by magnesium and oxygen is called magnesium oxide.
Mg has a +2 charge and Cl has a -1 charge.The correct formula is MgCl2
No - phosphorous can not just appear.Heating magnesium hydroxide will give magnesium oxide and water.
magnesium sulfate is a compound that contains sulphur and magnesium i think this answer may not be correct
Magnesium Bromide
Sn3(PO4)2
MgCl2
The correct answer is Magnesium Sulfide
MgI2 is magnesium iodide. Magnesium is divalent, it forms the Mg2+ ion, iodine forms the I- ion.
I believe that what you have in mind is the phosphate radical, PO4. While this radical appears in many compounds, it is not itself a compound.
The compound is ionic because Mg (magnesium) is a metal and S (sulfur) is a non metal with a relatively high electro-negativity.MgS [note correct letter cases] has ionic bonds.