if hydrogen has to be produced from hot water then magnesium produces more in a short time because it is more reactive towards water but if water is pour on red hot iron then it produces more.
Mg + 2HCl → MgCl2 + H2 magnesium+Hydrochloric acid→magnesium chloride+water (H2O)
When magnesium reacts with sulfuric acid, it produces magnesium sulfate, hydrogen gas, and heat. The reaction is exothermic and the hydrogen gas produced can be observed as bubbles. Additionally, magnesium sulfate is a white solid that can form as a precipitate in the solution.
Mg + H2SO4 --> MgSO4 + H2 It would appear that this bubbling is hydrogen gas rising to the surface of the solution.
Hydrochloric acid would react with the metal magnesium to produce magnesium chloride and hydrogen gas. This reaction involves the acid dissolving the metal to form a salt and releasing hydrogen gas as a byproduct.
Sure, it will. Magnesium is a very active metal and reacts with all acids to liberate hydrogen gas.
I am assuming you are mixing Magnesium and Zinc metals with an acid which would produce Hydrogen gas.
Mg + 2HCl → MgCl2 + H2 magnesium+Hydrochloric acid→magnesium chloride+water (H2O)
When magnesium reacts with sulfuric acid, it produces magnesium sulfate, hydrogen gas, and heat. The reaction is exothermic and the hydrogen gas produced can be observed as bubbles. Additionally, magnesium sulfate is a white solid that can form as a precipitate in the solution.
Mg + H2SO4 --> MgSO4 + H2 It would appear that this bubbling is hydrogen gas rising to the surface of the solution.
Hydrochloric acid would react with the metal magnesium to produce magnesium chloride and hydrogen gas. This reaction involves the acid dissolving the metal to form a salt and releasing hydrogen gas as a byproduct.
Yes it does. However, it takes a much longer period of time to get the magnesium to give off hydrogen particles. After a solid 45 minutes you might get a pop, but it's part of the Alkaline Earth Metals which means yes... it will eventually pop.
Sure, it will. Magnesium is a very active metal and reacts with all acids to liberate hydrogen gas.
Probably an explosion. Sulphuric acid and magnesium would produce magnesium sulphate and hydrogen gas. The latter would react with the flame to produce water by combining with atmospheric oxygen. The original reaction may well be endothermic and be self combusting so don't try this at home or without safety procedures in a lab.
Yes, magnesium metal will react with dilute sulfuric acid to produce magnesium sulfate and hydrogen gas. This is a common reaction in chemistry labs to study the reactivity of metals with acids.
When sulfuric acid and magnesium metal are combined, a chemical reaction occurs where hydrogen gas is released. This reaction is exothermic, which means it releases heat. The magnesium metal dissolves in the sulfuric acid, forming magnesium sulfate and hydrogen gas.
hydrogen gas.. and it also produces a salt Mg(s) + H2SO4(aq) ¾ ¾ ® Mg2+(aq) + SO42-(aq) + H2(g)
magnesium + dilute acid=magnesium dilute hydroxide and hydrogen