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Magnesium chloride is an inorganic compound with the formula Mg Cl 2. It forms hydrates MgCl 2 ·nH 2 O, where n can range from 1 to 12. These salts are colorless or white solids that are highly soluble in water. These compounds and their solutions, both of which occur in nature, have a variety of practical uses.
Bischofite is a hydrous magnesium chloride mineral with formula MgCl 2 ·6H 2 O. It belongs to halides and is a sea salt concentrate. It contains many macro- and micro-elements vital for human health, in much higher concentrations than can be found in sea or ocean salt.
Carnallite (also carnalite) is an evaporite mineral, a hydrated potassium magnesium chloride with formula KCl.MgCl 2 ·6(H 2 O). It is variably colored yellow to white, reddish, and sometimes colorless or blue.
The name of the Grignard reagent comes from the French chemist Victor Grignard who discovered it. This type of organomagnesium compound has the general formula R–Mg–X, where R is a hydrocarbon group and X is a halogen. They are usually coordinated with solvent molecules. bit.
It is sold under the trade name anhydrone. Manufacture of this product on a semi-industrial scale was first performed by G. Frederick Smith in his garage in Urbana Illinois, but later at a permanent facility in Columbus, OH called G. Frederick Smith Chemical Co. He sold the magnesium perchlorate to A. H. Thomas Co., now Thomas Scientific, under ...
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Magnesium hydroxychloride [1] is the traditional term for several chemical compounds of magnesium, chlorine, oxygen, and hydrogen whose general formula xMgO·yMgCl 2 ·zH 2 O, for various values of x, y, and z; or, equivalently, Mg x+y (OH) 2x Cl 2y (H 2 O) z−x.