I am sure that the doctors who treated me in these two cases would disagree but I would say that magnesium sulfate sure didn't help keep me from progressing into full blown labor after being admitted for suspected preterm labor and told it was just uteran irritability. I would be admitted, hooked up to an IV, and given magnesium sulfate. With in a few hours of treatment and great misery I would deliver the baby they were trying to keep in for a few more weeks. Again I had this treatment twice and it seemed to me like it made any contractions I may have been having worse.
The chemical name is magnesium sulfate, written as MgSO47H2O.
Yes, magnesium sulfate contains sulfur in the sulfate ion (SO4^2-) component.
The equation for the reaction between iron sulfate (FeSO4) and magnesium (Mg) is: FeSO4 + Mg -> MgSO4 + Fe. This is a single displacement reaction where magnesium replaces iron in the iron sulfate compound, forming magnesium sulfate and elemental iron.
When sodium hydroxide reacts with magnesium sulfate, a double displacement reaction occurs where the sodium ions from sodium hydroxide switch places with the magnesium ions from magnesium sulfate to form sodium sulfate and magnesium hydroxide. The products of this reaction are aqueous sodium sulfate and a white precipitate of magnesium hydroxide.
Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) dissociates into magnesium ions (Mg^2+) and sulfate ions (SO4^2-) in solution.
This application is not scientifically confirmed.
No, magnesium sulfate will not react with magnesium because magnesium sulfate is a salt that dissolves in water to form magnesium ions and sulfate ions. Pure magnesium does not react with magnesium sulfate.
Epsom salts are magnesium sulfate crystals.
Mg2So doesn't exist; probable magnesium sulfide (MgS) or magnesium sulfate (MgSO4).
The chemical compound MgSO4 is called magnesium sulfate.
Magnesium will react with sulfuric acid to produce magnesium sulfate.
No. Table sugar is sucrose. Magnesium sulfate is epsom salt.
The percentage of sulfur in magnesium sulfate is 32.2%.
Magnesium sulfate molecules doesn't freeze.
Magnesium + Copper(II) sulfate -> Magnesium sulfate + Copper This balanced equation represents the displacement reaction between magnesium and copper sulfate, where magnesium replaces copper in the compound to form magnesium sulfate while copper is displaced.
Magnesium oxide is MgO and magnesium sulfate is MgSO4. Two completely different compounds.
magnesium sulfate is a compound that contains sulphur and magnesium i think this answer may not be correct