magnesium
No, magnesium cannot displace aluminum in a chemical reaction. Magnesium is less reactive than aluminum in terms of their positions in the reactivity series of metals. Therefore, when placed in a solution containing aluminum ions, magnesium will not replace aluminum from its compounds or solutions.
An object submerged in a fluid displaces a volume of fluid equal to its own volume. This is known as Archimedes' principle.
A more reactive element, such as magnesium or sodium, can displace manganese from MnCl2 through a single displacement reaction. When magnesium or sodium is added to MnCl2, manganese will be displaced from the compound, and magnesium chloride or sodium chloride will be formed.
because in table of re-activity of metals it is below zinc
Aluminum will displace copper from copper(II) fluoride (CuF2) to form aluminum fluoride (AlF3) and copper metal (Cu) in a single displacement reaction.
Yes, a cubic inch of lead displaces the same amount of water as a cubic inch of aluminum. Displacement is based on volume, so regardless of the material's density, a cubic inch of any substance will displace an equal volume of water. Therefore, both lead and aluminum, when measured at one cubic inch, will displace one cubic inch of water.
Displaces is a verb (third person singular present tense of displace).
Aluminum is more reactive than iron, meaning it can displace iron in a chemical reaction. In practical terms, this means aluminum will react with certain substances that iron will not.
When aluminum is added to zinc nitrate, a redox reaction occurs, where aluminum displaces zinc from the nitrate solution. Aluminum becomes oxidized while zinc becomes reduced. This results in the formation of aluminum nitrate and zinc metal as products.
a submerged object displaces liquid which is equal to its volume
Nothing will happen. Displacement reaction only happens when the element is more reactive than the salt solution. An example will be the otherwise. If you put aluminum metal into a solution of Copper (II) Sulfate. The aluminum metal will displace copper metal and you will have a solution of Aluminum Sulfate and copper metal. As long the element you put into the salt solution is more reactive than the cation of the solution, it will displace the metal.
No, magnesium cannot displace aluminum in a chemical reaction. Magnesium is less reactive than aluminum in terms of their positions in the reactivity series of metals. Therefore, when placed in a solution containing aluminum ions, magnesium will not replace aluminum from its compounds or solutions.
Mercury displaces Silver because it has a higher density. Or in other words it's heavier.
The substance is likely aluminum, as its density around 2.7 g/cm^3 means that 273 g would displace approximately 101.1 ml of water. Since the displacement was less than this, aluminum is the most suitable option.
Yes. A floating object displaces its own mass in water.
Iron would not react with aluminum nitrate because iron is less reactive than aluminum and would not displace aluminum from its compound.
Overflow can measure the volume of water displaced by an object when it is submerged. By measuring the overflow, one can determine the volume of the object, as it is equal to the volume of water it displaces.