Nope. There would be no reaction because magnesium is higher on the reactive series than magnesium. It would stay the same.
MgSO47H2O is the molecular formula for magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
ZnSO4 + MgCO3-------> MgSO4 + ZnCO3
You get Zinc Sulphate.
Magnesium Sulphate and Zinc magnesium + zinc sulphate = magnesium sulphate + zinc By Moin Hussain
You create magnesium sulfate and zinc through single discplacement/replacement.Zinc sulfate(aq) + Magnesium (s)->Magnesium sulfate + Zinc (s)ZnSO4(aq)+ Mg (s) -> MgSO4 + Zn(s)Hope it helps ;)
Zinc oxide reacts with metallic magnesium to produce magnesium oxide and metallic zinc.
Magnesium is more reactive than copper in the reactivity series (reactive metal atoms displaces less reactive metal ions from its salts).therefore : Mg displaces CU from its salt forming MgSO4 (Magnesium Sulphate)
no as of magnesium being higher in the reactivity series
Magnesium Sulphate and Zinc magnesium + zinc sulphate = magnesium sulphate + zinc By Moin Hussain
You create magnesium sulfate and zinc through single discplacement/replacement.Zinc sulfate(aq) + Magnesium (s)->Magnesium sulfate + Zinc (s)ZnSO4(aq)+ Mg (s) -> MgSO4 + Zn(s)Hope it helps ;)
Zinc oxide reacts with metallic magnesium to produce magnesium oxide and metallic zinc.
Magnesium is more reactive than copper in the reactivity series (reactive metal atoms displaces less reactive metal ions from its salts).therefore : Mg displaces CU from its salt forming MgSO4 (Magnesium Sulphate)
Magnesium sulfide is a simple salt, MgS. Sulphate is a polyatomic ion with a formula SO <sub>4</sub>, therefore, the formula for Magnesium sulfate would be MgSO<sub>4</sub>
no as of magnesium being higher in the reactivity series
i think that it would be displaced .... wont it?
Zn(s) + MgSO4(aq) → ZnSO4(aq) + Mg(s) In this reaction, the zinc atoms in the solid zinc (Zn) displace the magnesium ions (Mg2+) in magnesium sulfate (MgSO4), forming zinc sulfate (ZnSO4) in the solution and depositing solid magnesium (Mg). It's important to note that this reaction typically occurs in an aqueous solution, where the zinc and magnesium sulfate are dissolved. In a dry or solid-state, magnesium sulfate and zinc do not undergo a direct reaction with each other.
No it does not. Magnesium is more reactive than zinc and so zinccant replace magnesium.
yes they are only common cause they have same oxidation which is 2+
Magnesium, zinc and copper are metals. Phosphorous is a metalloid.
magnesium