Elliott007 Posted November 9, 2011 Posted November 9, 2011 I was doing some Reaserch about various compounds and according to Wikipedia magnesium chloride decomposes if you slowly heat it to about 300 degrees.i was just wondering what it decomposes to because it does not say? 1
Seiryuu Posted November 10, 2011 Posted November 10, 2011 Well, seeing as that the composition of magnesium chloride is [ce]MgCl2[/ce] and that we're told it decomposes (i.e., breaks down), the most probable reaction would be [ce]MgCl2 -> Mg_{(s)} + Cl2_{(g)}[/ce].
elementcollector1 Posted November 10, 2011 Posted November 10, 2011 Well, seeing as that the composition of magnesium chloride is [ce]MgCl2[/ce] and that we're told it decomposes (i.e., breaks down), the most probable reaction would be [ce]MgCl2 -> Mg_{(s)} + Cl2_{(g)}[/ce]. So would it make a sintered magnesium powder?
Elliott007 Posted November 10, 2011 Author Posted November 10, 2011 1320952487[/url]' post='637839']Well, seeing as that the composition of magnesium chloride is [ce]MgCl2[/ce] and that we're told it decomposes (i.e., breaks down), the most probable reaction would be [ce]MgCl2 -> Mg_{(s)} + Cl2_{(g)}[/ce]. Would it make magnesium metal or would it react with the oxygen to make magnesium oxide?
elementcollector1 Posted November 20, 2011 Posted November 20, 2011 I would assume magnesium, but I may be mistaken.
technie Posted November 23, 2011 Posted November 23, 2011 magnesium is not stable as an element of its own, chances are that it is reactive and would react to form magnesium oxide, oxidized by oxygen. As temperatures so high are still present, it would certainly be magnesium oxide, a brittle compound. magnesium strips react with oxygen just with a flame burning, much less 300 degress of heating... -.-
John Cuthber Posted November 23, 2011 Posted November 23, 2011 The decomposition must refer to the hydrate.
mrteverett Posted November 24, 2011 Posted November 24, 2011 (edited) magnesium is not stable as an element of its own, chances are that it is reactive and would react to form magnesium oxide, oxidized by oxygen. As temperatures so high are still present, it would certainly be magnesium oxide, a brittle compound. magnesium strips react with oxygen just with a flame burning, much less 300 degress of heating... -.- I would add that it is probably difficult to avoid some sort of post-reaction to occur. In many cases, a decomp (or similar reaction) may be carried out in an environment (e.g. nitrogen) that is inert towards the target metal. However, magnesium makes the nitride and oxide when heated in air, so it may be difficult in practice to get pure Mg this way. Electrolysis of the molten compound is a better bet I suppose. Edited November 24, 2011 by mrteverett
John Cuthber Posted November 24, 2011 Posted November 24, 2011 The real problem will be that you simply don't get magnesium this way.
mskittykat Posted November 24, 2011 Posted November 24, 2011 I think it would create Magnesium flakes under heat. When Mg was first discovered, it was reacted with K vapors to produce pure Mg. But considering the heat, it will probably form MgO (magnesium is highly reactive w/ O2)...but I'm not sure, haven't tried this experiment. Have you considered heating under vacuum, is that even a possibility does anyone know? Would it make magnesium metal or would it react with the oxygen to make magnesium oxide?
elementcollector1 Posted November 25, 2011 Posted November 25, 2011 Er... argon? If it does create Mg, then I'll be doing this particular experiment a lot.
John Cuthber Posted November 25, 2011 Posted November 25, 2011 I think it would create Magnesium flakes under heat. I don't.
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