The high boiling point of Magnesium is due to the metallic bonding.
Oh, dude, like, I got you! So, the correct name for MgCl3 is magnesium chloride. Magnesium because of the Mg, and chloride because of the Cl. It's like chemistry naming 101, bro.
The name of Magnesium comes from a Greek District in Thessaly
My husband is in chemotherapy and he got a sheet from the actual doctor that says take Senakot, 2 tablespoons of Milk of Magnesia OR 1/2 bottle of Magnesium Citrate daily until bowel movement
When we did it the other day what happened was this: the magnesium caused tiny bubbles and little dots of black fell to the bottom of the test tube (Copper I guess). When the reaction stopped, the liquid was still blue. We tried heating the mixture and got a bit more bubbles and 'dots' then we left the test tube for several days. Now the magnesium is coated with a pretty turquise coating of something, the solution is still blue, the dots are still black at the bottom of the tube. So CuSO4 + H2O + Mg should give you MgSO4 (which is soluble) and Cu. I do not know what we have actually got. The chemicals came from a chemistry set...the CaOH was equally not 'right' or rather it was far less 'basic' that I expected hmmm.
No. (Its an element.)
Magnesium oxide is a compound that forms when magnesium reacts with oxygen. It is commonly used as a dietary supplement and in the production of materials such as cement and ceramics. Magnesium oxide has a white powder form and is known for its high melting point and chemical stability.
Magnesium
it expands at constant rate and has got high boiling point.
it got to be 14 feet at its highest point
Magnesium got its name from Magnesia, a region in ancient Greece where the mineral magnesite (magnesium carbonate) was first discovered.
Sometimes people get so high that they can't remember that they got high. That's what I call the "point of no return."
You can find them new online for around $150, although the Hi-Point website list the msrp as $186.00 bull i got one on sale $300.00
Priestley and Lavoisier discovered oxygen. I think they burned magnesium and it got heavier. The phlogiston theory (the theory that people believed about burning and combustion) could not answer this so they had discovered something. We now know that oxygen from the air is "extracted" when the magnesium is burned. the oxygen then combines with the magnesium and form magnesium oxide. So if you started with 24g of magnesium and burned it, you would end up with about 40g of magnesium oxide.
You can find them new online for around $150, although the Hi-Point website list the msrp as $186.00 bull i got one on sale $300.00
Oh, dude, like, I got you! So, the correct name for MgCl3 is magnesium chloride. Magnesium because of the Mg, and chloride because of the Cl. It's like chemistry naming 101, bro.
You can find them new online for around $150, although the Hi-Point website list the msrp as $186.00 bull i got one on sale $300.00
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