Magnesium chloride has a octahedral crystalline structure.
Ionic
MgCl2 is an ionic compound that forms a crystal lattice structure in its solid state. It is a white crystalline solid with a high melting point.
Magnesium chloride should, by its chemical formula, be a salt - and therefore, solid.
When hydrochloric acid is added to solid magnesium oxide, a chemical reaction takes place in which hydrogen gas is produced and magnesium chloride is formed. The reaction can be represented by the equation: MgO + 2HCl -> MgCl2 + H2.
Your question appears to lack some necessary detail. Sodium is Na Magnesium Chloride is MgCl2 "What is the equation for sodium and magnesium chloride?" = Na + MgCl2 Is that what you are asking or do mean what is the equation for sodium ___x___ and magnesium chloride? Magnesium chloride appears commercially as a solution in water from 0-35% MgCl2, or an anhydrous solid 98% MgCl2 or hexahydrate solid 47% MgCl2. What is the form of sodium you are trying to use? NaOH? NaCl? ??
Ionic
crystals
because it is an crystaline solid
Ionic
MgCl2 is an ionic compound that forms a crystal lattice structure in its solid state. It is a white crystalline solid with a high melting point.
These are solids with covalent bonds.
Yes. Barium nitrate is a crystaline solid as the several ionic materials. This substance decomposes at 590ºC.
Ionic
Magnesium chloride should, by its chemical formula, be a salt - and therefore, solid.
Silicate.
Melting the rock to its liquid form then re-freezing it into a solid will realign the rock's crystaline structure thereby altering the density.
They react to form H2CO3 and MgCl2