Magnesium, calcium, sodium, lithium, uranium, plutonium can be flammable - depending on the temperature and the physical form.
Titanium is flammable at high temperature.
Chemical symbols are: Mercury-Hg, Gold-Au, Silver-Ag, Arsenic-As, Radon-Rn, Plutonium-Pu, Uranium-U, Potassium-K, Sodium-Na, Titanium-Ti.
Titanium is a less reactive metal and is placed below magnesium but above iron in the reactivity series. It does not react with water or dilute acids at room temperature but can react with steam to form titanium dioxide and hydrogen gas.
Magnesium burns in air and nitrogen to form magnesium oxide (MgO) and magnesium nitride (Mg3N2), respectively.
Magnesium is a metal. So it should be called as heavy. The correct term is more dense or denser than most other nonmetal elements. Still heavy or light is a relative term. You have to compare with other substance.
Argon atmosphere is used to prevent oxidation of titanium during the reaction with sodium or magnesium. Titanium is highly reactive with oxygen in the air and can form unwanted oxides, which can interfere with the reaction or reduce the yield of the desired product. The argon atmosphere creates an oxygen-free environment, ensuring a clean and efficient reaction between titanium chloride and sodium or magnesium.
Chemical symbols are: Mercury-Hg, Gold-Au, Silver-Ag, Arsenic-As, Radon-Rn, Plutonium-Pu, Uranium-U, Potassium-K, Sodium-Na, Titanium-Ti.
A rock that contains all of those elements would likely be a type of granite. Granite is a common rock type that is composed of minerals such as quartz (silicon and oxygen), feldspar (aluminum, potassium, calcium), and biotite (iron, magnesium, titanium). Sodium is typically found in trace amounts in many rocks, including granite.
They are GALLIUM and CAESIUM that can even melt if we keep them on our palm.
Magnesium is lighter.
Oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron, calcium, sodium, potassium, magnesium, titanium, hydrogen, phosphorus, and manganese (in that order) are the twelve most common elements in Earth's crust.
The ore rutile (impure titanium (IV) oxide) is heated with chlorine and coke at a temperature of about 900°C. Then the Titanium chloride is reduced using Magnesium and distilled to get rid of the Magnesium chloride (Magnesium atoms displaced titanium atoms). Then you get titanium.
The Kroll process is used to purify titanium metal. It involves reducing titanium tetrachloride with magnesium to produce titanium and magnesium chloride. The magnesium chloride is then removed, leaving behind purified titanium metal.
Hydrogen, Lithium, Beryllium, Magnesium, Sodium, Potassium, Calcium, Aluminum, Barium, Titanium, Rubidium, Cesium, Francium, Scandium, Iron, Nickle, Cobalt, Copper, Tin, Zinc, Gallium, Lead, Polonium, Bismuth, Mercury, Uranium, Plutonium, Strontium, Osmium, Tungsten, Europium, Lawrencium, Cerium, Thorium, Technetium, Tellurium, Yttrium, Ytterbium, ....and more.
Lithium, Sodium, Magnesium, Aluminum, Potassium, Calcium, Scandium, Titanium, Vanadium, Chromium, Iron, Cobalt, Nickel, Copper, Zinc etc
Titanium is less reactive than magnesium, but it's a moot point. What's labelled as a Magnesium frame is usually a (mainly) Aluminum alloy, with some magnesium in it.
No, the Sony Vaio Titanium laptop is in fact not made from titanium, it does have a magnesium alloy casing though.
Magnesium, Titanium