April 18, 2024, 08:37:56 PM
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Topic: Calcium metal in magnesium chloride (aq) - could water be a competing reactant?  (Read 2682 times)

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Offline ajax0604

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A multiple choice question states that calcium metal is placed in a solution of magnesium chloride. One of the answer choices says that magnesium ions will be reduced and calcium will be oxidised which I thought was the right answer but there is another choice which says that water will be reduced producing hydrogen gas and calcium will be oxidised. This also seems likely, possibly more likely than the first choice because water is a better oxidant compared to magnesium ion on the electrochemical series. Could both reactions occur simultaneously? Thank you.

Offline Borek

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What would happen to metallic magnesium?
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Offline ajax0604

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Magnesium metal won't react with calcium ions but it could react slowly with water to produce hydrogen gas and insoluble magnesium hydroxide?

Offline Borek

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Haven't you just answered your own question?
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Offline ajax0604

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Then this multiple choice question has more than one possible answer

Offline Borek

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No. Magnesium metal doesn't exist in the solution - so it won't be created. Calcium will react with water, yielding the most stable product directly.
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Offline ajax0604

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I see. So when calcium reacts with water to produce hydrogen gas and hydroxide ions, the hydroxide ions will react with the magnesium ions to form magnesium hydroxide.

Offline Borek

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Whether Mg(OH)2 will precipitate depends on the concentrations, but that's more or less correct way of thinking.
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