Takes temperatures of over 2,800 degrees to melt magnesium oxide.
Chemical Property (as a layer of oxide is formed on the surface)
Sort of. Sodium oxide reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide, which is soluble.
Sodium Oxide
Natrium is another name for sodium (thats where Na comes from)... so it will be the same as sodium oxide not sodium perocide.
Well, you have a metal oxide reacting with a non-metal oxide. They usually tend to have a synthesis reaction. In this case Sodium Oxide + Sulfur Dioxide = ? The products are therefor Sodium Sulfite Sodium Oxide + Sulfur Dioxide -> Sodium Sulfite The chemical equation is Na2O + SO2 -> Na2SO3
It is Sodium Oxide
Na- sodium O- oxygen Na2O- Sodium oxide
Today are known three oxides of sodium: * Sodium oxide (Disodium oxide): Na2O * Sodium peroxide (Disodium dioxide): Na2O2 * Sodium super-oxide (Sodium dioxide): NaO2
Sodium Oxide is a compound.
Chemical Property (as a layer of oxide is formed on the surface)
No. Sodium oxide has only basic properties, no acidic ones.
Na2O sodium oxide
sodium oxide: 1132oC magnesium oxide: 2852oC
Sort of. Sodium oxide reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide, which is soluble.
sodium oxide + hydrochloric acid -> sodium chloride + hydrogen
Sodium Oxide
An oxide of sodium chloride doesn't exist. The oxides of sodium are: Na2O, NaO2, Na2O2.