Stop them goin rusty
Zinc and magnesium are too reactive.
No, as magnesium is more reactive, and would 'keep' the nitrate.
most likely Magnesium-Chloride(MG?CL?) and Iron(FE?) The numbers depend on the oxidation states of iron and magnesium
Magnesium(s) + Iron(s) + HCl(aq) -> MagnesiumChloride(aq) + Hydrogen(g) + Iron(s)Iron will not react with hydrochloric acid as magnesium is more reactive than iron , so magnesium will react with hydrochloric acid to give salt and hydrogen gas while iron is deposited.METAL + ACID -> METAL SALT + HYDROGEN GAS
They are all metals.
Zinc and magnesium are too reactive.
Iron pipes are made of iron.
Iron pipes are made of iron.
No. Iron cannot displace Magnesium from Magnesium oxide
you get magnesium oxide + iron
No, as magnesium is more reactive, and would 'keep' the nitrate.
most likely Magnesium-Chloride(MG?CL?) and Iron(FE?) The numbers depend on the oxidation states of iron and magnesium
Pipes are not made out of iron because they rust to easily.
It depends on the type of meteorite: Stony meteorites are composed of Iron and Magnesium silicates. Stony-Iron meteorites are compose of silicates and Iron and Magnesium metals. Iron meteorites are primarily composed of Iron and Magnesium metals and Iron suphides.
yes! it does because magnesium is higher in reactivity series than iron , so the magnesium atom would displace or push out the iron atom from the compound and join with chloride, leaving the pure iron out of the compound Mg + FeCl2 -- MgCl2 + Fe
Steam carrying pipes
Magnesium and iron