Chemistry, asked by teresamother554, 9 months ago

Chemical equivalent ratio of Mg and Al is

Answers

Answered by yagnasrinadupuru
0

The equivalent weight of an element is its gram atomic weight divided by its valence (combining power). Some equivalent weights are: silver (Ag), 107.868 g; magnesium (Mg), 24.312/2 g; aluminum (Al), 26.9815/3 g; sulfur (S, in forming a sulfide), 32.064/2 g.

Answered by ThanoojMahenderker48
1

Answer:

The equivalent weight of an element is its gram atomic weight divided by its valence (combining power). Some equivalent weights are: silver (Ag), 107.868 g; magnesium (Mg), 24.312/2 g; aluminum (Al), 26.9815/3 g; sulfur (S, in forming a sulfide), 32.064/2 g.

Explanation:

The equivalence ratio is defined as the ratio of the actual fuel/air ratio to the stoichiometric fuel/air ratio. Stoichiometric combustion occurs when all the oxygen is consumed in the reaction, and there is no molecular oxygen(O2) in the products.

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