Well you have an ionic form of Mg, so you wont be getting pure Mg0 out of this reaction without some sort of reduction.
Where are you getting your citric acid from? HCl is also called Muric Acid (someone check me on that, I'm 80% sure on that), and you can buy it from most department stores. I would be careful with it though, and make sure you have some sort of neutralizing base around incase you spill.
I don't see your reaction proceeding the way you want it to be honest.
Thank you for your answer.
My citric acid is from pharmacy and it is meant for storing juices and berries. It is in crystalline form. I googled and found muriatic acid.
I did some research and made the following notes (please someone correct if I'm wrong or saying something wrongly:
- Talc contains phyllosilicate [Si
2nO
5n]
2n- , n=2
- The structure of talc is [Mg
3]
6+[Si
4O
10]
4-[(OH)
2]
2-- It is a hydroxide (2 OH groups) so it is not soluble in water
I think I should study the Lewis electron configurations for talc to see better how I could break the bond between Mg and the rest of the compund. As I said I'm new to chemistry so I may sound a bit naiive at times.
If I manage to break the bond and separate the Mg
2+ ions in a solution then how should I "convert" the ions "back to atoms" ? Also please correct me if I'm writing like an idiot. Thanks