Yes, MgCO3 is a type of electrolyte. It is a weak one because it is not soluble when put in water.
The chemical formula* for magnesium carbonate is MgCO3. *Note that compounds have chemical formulas; elements have chemical symbols.
magnesium carbonate
The chemical equation is:MgCl2 + Li2CO3 = MgCO3(s) + 2 LiCl
This compound is magnesium carbonate.
With sufficient heating, MgCO3 -> MgO + CO2, magnesium oxide and carbon dioxide.
The ratio of MgCO3 to WHAT!
The chemical formula* for magnesium carbonate is MgCO3. *Note that compounds have chemical formulas; elements have chemical symbols.
magnesium carbonate
The chemical equation is:MgCl2 + Li2CO3 = MgCO3(s) + 2 LiCl
This compound is magnesium carbonate.
To calculate the number of moles in 100 g of MgCO3, you need to first determine the molar mass of MgCO3, which is 84.31 g/mol. Divide the given mass (100 g) by the molar mass to find the number of moles. In this case, 100 g / 84.31 g/mol ≈ 1.19 moles of MgCO3.
With sufficient heating, MgCO3 -> MgO + CO2, magnesium oxide and carbon dioxide.
MgCO3 has 5 atoms One Mg One C Three O
The chemical name for MgCO3 is magnesium carbonate. Mg corresponds to the element magnesium, C for carbon and O for oxygen. MgCO3's molecular weight is 84.321-grams per mole.
MgCO3
Magnesium carbonate (MgCO3) is composed of one magnesium (Mg) atom and one carbonate (CO3) ion.
I assume you mean MgCO3, not MgCo3 (the first is magnesium carbonate). Be careful when writing CO, because Co is cobalt, and CO is carbon and oxygen. Mg is Magnesium, C is carbon and O is oxygen. Therefore the elements present are magnesium, carbon and oxygen.