Magnesium can bond with oxygen to form magnesium oxide. Magnesium can also bond with chloride and that will create magnesium dichloride.
elemnts it likes to bond with ( if any)
Yes. Sulfur is a non-metal and magnesium is a metal, hence it suits the condition to form ionic bonds between these two elements with the formula MgS, magnesium sulfide.
Like many other elements, magnesium can be found in a variety of compounds.
A ionic bond
A ionic bond will form. Magnesium will lose two electrons and the two chlorine atoms will pick up one atom each. It will become magnesium dichloride (MgCl2). I believe that a polar - covalent bond will form. .3 to1.7 difference in electronegativity is polar covalent. and when you subtract the electronegativity of the two elements you get .5 and that falls in the polar covalent area.
An ionic bond
Hydrogen is a non-metal, therefore it will bond with metals such as magnesium, silver, etc.
Magnesium is an s-block element and it forms only ionic bonds with other elements.
Aside from 'The Covalent Bond' type, Magnesium will act chemically like Calcium will.
Yes. If it bonds with a metal, such as magnesium, an ionic bond is formed. However, it can just as easily form covalent compounds with non-metallic elements like nitrogen.
they are alkali earth metals.
Magnesium and bromine form an ionic bond.
Magnesium chloride has an ionic bond.
Magnesium and iodine react to form the ionic compound magnesium iodide - MgI2.
Yes. Sulfur is a non-metal and magnesium is a metal, hence it suits the condition to form ionic bonds between these two elements with the formula MgS, magnesium sulfide.
magnesium oxide
Like many other elements, magnesium can be found in a variety of compounds.
yes it does because it feels like it what what (i had it on my science homework)