2HCl + Mg ---------> MgCl2 + H2
Hydrogen chloride + Magnesium -------> Magnesium Chloride + Hydrogen gas
When a metal reacts with an acid, hydrogen gas and a salt is produced. For example, reacting magnesium with hydrochloric acid the products are magnesium chloride (salt) and hydrogen gas. The balanced chemical equation is shown below: Mg + 2HCl --> MgCl2 + H2
Magnesium phosphate can be prepared by reacting magnesium chloride with potassium phosphate in solution to form insoluble magnesium phosphate, which can then be filtered and dried. The chemical equation for the reaction is MgCl2 + K3PO4 → Mg3(PO4)2 + 6 KCl.
The balanced chemical equation for magnesium strip reacting with KCl is: 2Mg(s) + 2KCl(aq) → 2K(s) + MgCl2(aq)
2Na + 2H2O -> 2NaOH + H2
To balance the chemical equation for strontium reacting with chlorine gas to form strontium chloride, you would write: Sr + Cl2 -> SrCl2. This equation shows that 1 atom of strontium is reacting with 1 molecule of chlorine gas to produce 1 molecule of strontium chloride.
The balanced chemical equation for hydrogen reacting with chlorine to form hydrogen chloride is: H2 + Cl2 → 2HCl.
Magnesium chloride is produced by reacting magnesium hydroxide (an alkali) with hydrochloric acid. The chemical equation for this reaction is: Mg(OH)2 + 2HCl → MgCl2 + 2H2O.
You can prepare hydrogen by adding magnesium to hydrochloric acid. hydrochloric acid + magnesium = magnesium chloride + hydrogen.
The formula of hydrochloric acid is HCl. When it reacts with magnesium metal, it forms magnesium chloride (MgCl2) and hydrogen gas (H2) according to this equation: 2HCl + Mg → MgCl2 + H2.
The word equation for the reaction between magnesium carbonate and nitric acid is: magnesium carbonate + nitric acid -> magnesium nitrate + carbon dioxide + water.
A balanced equation MUST have EQUAL numbers of EACH type of atom on BOTH sides of the arrow.The balanced equation for the reaction magnesium chloride plus sulfuric acid is;MgCl2 + H2SO4 ------> MgSO4 + 2HCl.
The balanced equation for hydrogen gas reacting with chlorine gas to produce hydrogen chloride gas is: H2(g) + Cl2(g) → 2HCl(g)
No, reacting zinc with hydrogen chloride will yield zinc chloride and hydrogen gas. Potassium chloride can be prepared by reacting potassium with hydrogen chloride or (more safely) potassium hydroxide with hydrogen chloride.
well obviously, if: Hydrochloric acid + Magnesium -> Magnesium Chloride + Hydrogen I'd say you CAN separate the magnesium Chloride by using Electrolysis ( using direct current to separate a compound to decompose into elements), but the Hydrogen doesn't have to, because there is an element not a compound. If you are talking about how you can separate HCL and Mg by itself, then obviously you can't because it is already separated.
The chemical equation for magnesium (Mg) reacting with hydrochloric acid (HCl) is: Mg + 2HCl -> MgCl2 + H2 In this reaction, magnesium displaces hydrogen in hydrochloric acid to form magnesium chloride and hydrogen gas.
The balanced equation for cesium reacting with chloride ions to form cesium chloride is 2Cs + Cl2 -> 2CsCl.
there are many many acidic corosive materials. you will need to be more specific as in what type of acid the magnesium is reacting with. i assume you are at school and are talking about hydrochloric acid. If you add Magnesium metal to hydrochloric acid , the Magnesium will dissolve and form bubbles of hydrogen gas.