Magnesium is the metal. Sulfuric acid is a compound.
No. Magnesium is a metal.
The magnesium will react with the acid to produce hydrogen gas and a magnesium salt.
The products that are formed will be magnesium salt, water and carbon dioxide. Exactly what salt is made depends the acid used. Hydrochloric acid produces magnesium chloride; sulphuric acid produces magnesium sulphate; nitric acid produces magnesium nitrate.
Magnesium will react with sulfuric acid to produce magnesium sulfate.
Increasing the concentration of an acid would increase the rate and vigor of the reaction involving a metal such as magnesium.
The bubbling you mention is Hydrogen gas being given off as a result of a reaction between the metal [Magnesium] and the acid [Sulphuric acid] Mg + H2SO4 = MgSO4 + H2 MgSO4 is a salt of Magnesium [Magnesium Sulphate] I hope this helps you.
Hydrochloric Acid
Magnesium is the metal. Sulfuric acid is a compound.
Magnesium oxalate is insoluble in sulfuric acid. Magnesium oxalate will not dissolve in sulfuric acid as it does not have the necessary chemical properties to react with the acid and form a soluble compound.
magnesium + hydrochloric acid = magnesium chloride + water
No, magnesium is a metal.
No. Magnesium is a metal.
Magnesium Oxide + Nitric Acid -----> Magnesium Nitrate + Water. Hope this helps.
Magnesium is more reactive with hydrochloric acid compared to copper. When magnesium reacts with hydrochloric acid, it produces hydrogen gas and magnesium chloride, while copper does not readily react with hydrochloric acid.
magnesium + sulphuric acid = magnesium sulfate + hydrogen gas
The magnesium will react with the acid to produce hydrogen gas and a magnesium salt.