|
General |
Name, Symbol, Number | Magnesium, Mg, 12 |
Series | alkali earth metals |
Group, Period, Block | 2 (IIA), 3, s |
Density, Hardness | 1738 kg/m3, 2.5 |
Appearance | silvery white |
Atomic Properties |
Atomic weight | 24.305 amu |
Atomic radius (calc.) | 150 pm (145 pm) |
Covalent radius | 130 pm |
van der Waals radius | 173 pm |
Electron configuration | [Ne]3s2 |
e- 's per energy level | 2, 8, 2 |
Oxidation states (Oxide) | 2 (strong base) |
Crystal structure | Hexagonal |
Physical Properties |
State of matter | solid (paramagnetic) |
Melting point | 923 K (1202 °F) |
Boiling point | 1363 K (1994 °F) |
Molar volume | 14.00 ×10-3 m3/mol |
Heat of vaporization | 127.4 kJ/mol |
Heat of fusion | 8.954 kJ/mol |
Vapor pressure | 361 Pa at 923 K |
Speed of sound | 4602 m/s at 293.15 K |
Miscellaneous |
Electronegativity | 1.31 (Pauling scale) |
Specific heat capacity | 1020 J/(kg*K) |
Electrical conductivity | 22.6 106/m ohm |
Thermal conductivity | 156 W/(m*K) |
1st ionization potential | 737.7 kJ/mol |
2nd ionization potential | 1450.7 kJ/mol |
3rd ionization potential | 7732.7 kJ/mol |
Most Stable Isotopes |
|
SI units & STP are used except where noted. |
Magnesium is a
chemical element in the
periodic table that has the symbol Mg and
atomic number 12.
Magnesium is the eighth most abundant element and constitutes about 2% of the
Earth's crust, and it is the third most plentiful element dissolved in seawater.
This
alkaline earth metal is primarily used as an
alloying agent to make
aluminum-magnesium alloys.
Notable Characteristics
Magnesium is a fairly strong, silvery-white, light-weight metal (one third lighter than aluminum)
that slightly tarnishes when exposed to air.
In a powder, this metal heats and ignites when exposed to air and burns with a white flame.
It is difficult to ignite in bulk, though it is easy to light if it is shaved in to thin strips.
Uses
Magnesium compounds, primarily magnesium oxide, are used mainly as refractory material in furnace linings for producing iron and steel, nonferrous metals, glass, and cement. Magnesium oxide and other compounds also are used in agricultural, chemical, and construction industries. This element's principal use is as an alloying additive to aluminum with these aluminum-magnesium alloys being used mainly for beverage cans[?]. Magnesium alloys also are used as structural components of automobiles and machinery. Another use of this metal is to aid the removal of sulfur from iron and steel.
Other uses include:
- Magnesium, like aluminum, is strong and light, so it is often used in high grade car wheels, called "mag wheels."
- Combined in alloys this metal is essential for airplane and missile construction.
- When used as an alloying agent, this metal improves the mechanical, fabrication, and welding characteristics of aluminum.
- Additive agent for conventional propellants and used in producing nodular graphite in cast iron.
- Reducing agent for the production of pure uranium and other metals from their salts.
- Its hydroxide is used in milk of magnesia[?], its chloride[?] and sulfate in Epsom salts, and its citrates[?] are used in medicine.
- Dead-burned magnesite is used for refractory purposes such as brick and liners in furnaces and converters.
- Magnesium is also flammable, burning at a temperature of (4000oF?).
- The extremely high temperature at which magnesium burns makes it a handy tool for starting emergency fires during outdoor recreation.
- Magnesium carbonate[?] (MgCO3) powder is also used by athletes, such as gymnasts and weightlifters, to improve the grip on objects -- the apparatus or lifting bar.
- Other uses include flashlight photography, flares, and pyrotechnics, including incendiary bombs.
History
The name originates from the
Greek word for a district in
Thessaly called
Magnesia[?].
Joseph Black[?] in
England recognized magnesium as being an element in
1755, Sir
Humphrey Davey electrolytically isolated pure magnesium metal in 1808 from a mix of magnesia and
HgO and
AA Bussy[?] prepared it in coherent form in
1831. Magnesium is the eighth most abundant element in the earth's crust. It is a
rare earth element and therefore does not occur uncombined with other elements. It is found in large deposits of
magnesite[?],
dolomite, and other
minerals.
Sources
In the
United States this metal is principally obtained by
electrolysis of fused
magnesium chloride[?] from
brines, wells, and
sea water. Although magnesium is found in over 60
minerals, only
dolomite,
magnesite[?],
brucite[?],
carnallite[?], and
olivine are of commercial importance.
Isolation (* follow):
cathode: Mg
2+* + 2
e- --> Mg
anode:
Cl-* ½Cl
2 (
gas) + e
-
Compounds
Organic magnesium is important in both
plant and
animal life.
Chlorophylls are magnesium-centered
porphyrins.
The adult daily nutritional requirement, which is affected by various factors include weight and size, is about 300
mg/day.
Isotopes
Magnesium-26 is a stable isotope that has found application in
isotopic geology, similar to that of
aluminum. Mg-26 is a
radiogenic daughter product of Al-26 (
half -life[?] = 0.72x106 yr). Large enrichments of stable Mg-26 have been observed in the
Ca-Al-rich inclusions of some
carbonaceous chondrite[?] meteorites. The anomalous abundance of Mg-26 is attributed to the decay of its parent Al-26 in the inclusions. Therefore, the meteorite must have formed in ation sources and external links: the
solar nebula before the Al-26 had decayed. Hence, these fragments are among the oldest objects in the
solar system and have preserved information about its earliest history.
It is conventional to plot Mg-26/Mg-24 against an Al/Mg ratio. In an isochron plot[?], the Al/Mg ratio plotted is Al-27/Mg-24. The slope of the isochron has no age significance, but indicates the initial Al-26/Al-27 ratio in the sample at the time when the systems were separated from a common reservoir.
Precautions
Magnesium metal is highly flammable in its pure form, especially when it is a powder.
Magnesium metal quickly reacts exothermically upon contact with air or water and should be handeld with care.
Water should not be used to extinguish magnesium fires.
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