Periodic Table Element Comparison: Compare Elements - Magnesium vs Bromine
Compare Magnesium and Bromine
Compare Magnesium and Bromine on the basis of their properties, attributes and periodic table facts. Compare elements on more than 90 properties. All the elements of similar categories show a lot of similarities and differences in their chemical, atomic, physical properties and uses. These similarities and dissimilarities should be known while we study periodic table elements. You can study the detailed comparison between Magnesium vs Bromine with most reliable information about their properties, attributes, facts, uses etc. You can compare Mg vs Br on more than 90 properties like electronegativity , oxidation state, atomic shells, orbital structure, Electronaffinity, physical states, electrical conductivity and many more.
Facts
Name | Magnesium | Bromine |
Atomic Number | 12 | 35 |
Atomic Symbol | Mg | Br |
Atomic Weight | 24.305 | 79.904 |
Phase at STP | Solid | Liquid |
Color | Silver | Red |
Metallic Classification | Alkaline Earth Metal | Halogens |
Group in Periodic Table | group 2 | group 17 |
Group Name | beryllium family | fluorine family |
Period in Periodic Table | period 3 | period 4 |
Block in Periodic Table | s -block | p -block |
Electronic Configuration | [Ne] 3s2 | [Ar] 3d10 4s2 4p5 |
Electronic Shell Structure (Electrons per shell) | 2, 8, 2 | 2, 8, 18, 7 |
Melting Point | 923 K | 265.8 K |
Boiling Point | 1363 K | 332 K |
CAS Number | CAS7439-95-4 | CAS7726-95-6 |
Neighborhood Elements | Neighborhood Elements of Magnesium | Neighborhood Elements of Bromine |
History
History | The element Magnesium was discovered by J. Black in year 1755 in United Kingdom. Magnesium derived its name from Magnesia, a district of Eastern Thessaly in Greece. | The element Bromine was discovered by J. Balard and C. Löwig in year 1825 in France. Bromine derived its name from the Greek bromos, meaning 'stench'. |
Discovery | J. Black (1755) | J. Balard and C. Löwig (1825) |
Isolated | H. Davy (1808) | J. Balard and C. Löwig (1825) |
Presence: Abundance in Nature and Around Us
Parts per billion (ppb) by weight / by atoms (1ppb =10^-7 %)
Abundance in Universe | 600000 / 30000 | 7 / 0.1 |
Abundance in Sun | 700000 / 30000 | - / - |
Abundance in Meteorites | 120000000 / 100000000 | 1200 / 230 |
Abundance in Earth's Crust | 29000000 / 25000000 | 3000 / 780 |
Abundance in Oceans | 1326000 / 337000 | 67300 / 5210 |
Abundance in Humans | 270000 / 70000 | 2900 / 230 |
Crystal Structure and Atomic Structure
Atomic Volume | 13.984 cm3/mol | 19.78 cm3/mol |
Atomic Radius | 145 pm | 94 pm |
Covalent Radius | 130 pm | 114 pm |
Van der Waals Radius | 173 pm | 185 pm |
Atomic Spectrum | ![]() | ![]() |
Lattice Constant | 320.94, 320.94, 521.08 pm | 672.65, 464.51, 870.23 pm |
Lattice Angle | π/2, π/2, 2 π/3 | π/2, π/2, π/2 |
Space Group Name | P63/mmc | Cmca |
Space Group Number | 194 | 64 |
Crystal Structure | Simple Hexagonal ![]() | Base Centered Orthorhombic ![]() |
Atomic and Orbital Properties
Atomic Number | 12 | 35 |
Number of Electrons (with no charge) | 12 | 35 |
Number of Protons | 12 | 35 |
Mass Number | 24.305 | 79.904 |
Number of Neutrons | 12 | 45 |
Shell structure (Electrons per energy level) | 2, 8, 2 | 2, 8, 18, 7 |
Electron Configuration | [Ne] 3s2 | [Ar] 3d10 4s2 4p5 |
Valence Electrons | 3s2 | 4s2 4p5 |
Oxidation State | 2 | -1, 1, 3, 5 |
Atomic Term Symbol (Quantum Numbers) | 1S0 | 2P3/2 |
Shell structure | ![]() | ![]() |
Isotopes and Nuclear Properties
Magnesium has 3 stable naturally occuring isotopes while Bromine has 2 stable naturally occuring isotopes.
Known Isotopes | 19Mg, 20Mg, 21Mg, 22Mg, 23Mg, 24Mg, 25Mg, 26Mg, 27Mg, 28Mg, 29Mg, 30Mg, 31Mg, 32Mg, 33Mg, 34Mg, 35Mg, 36Mg, 37Mg, 38Mg, 39Mg, 40Mg | 67Br, 68Br, 69Br, 70Br, 71Br, 72Br, 73Br, 74Br, 75Br, 76Br, 77Br, 78Br, 79Br, 80Br, 81Br, 82Br, 83Br, 84Br, 85Br, 86Br, 87Br, 88Br, 89Br, 90Br, 91Br, 92Br, 93Br, 94Br, 95Br, 96Br, 97Br |
Stable Isotopes | Naturally occurring stable isotopes: 24Mg, 25Mg, 26Mg | Naturally occurring stable isotopes: 79Br, 81Br |
Neutron Cross Section | 0.063 | 6.8 |
Neutron Mass Absorption | 0.0001 | 0.002 |
Chemical Properties: Ionization Energies and electron affinity
Valence or Valency | 2 | 5 |
Electronegativity | 1.31 Pauling Scale | 2.96 Pauling Scale |
Electron Affinity | 0 kJ/mol | 324.6 kJ/mol |
Ionization Energies | 1st: 737.7 kJ/mol 2nd: 1450.7 kJ/mol 3rd: 7732.7 kJ/mol 4th: 10542.5 kJ/mol 5th: 13630 kJ/mol 6th: 18020 kJ/mol 7th: 21711 kJ/mol 8th: 25661 kJ/mol 9th: 31653 kJ/mol 10th: 35458 kJ/mol 11th: 169988 kJ/mol 12th: 189368 kJ/mol | 1st: 1139.9 kJ/mol 2nd: 2103 kJ/mol 3rd: 3470 kJ/mol 4th: 4560 kJ/mol 5th: 5760 kJ/mol 6th: 8550 kJ/mol 7th: 9940 kJ/mol 8th: 18600 kJ/mol |
Physical Properties
Density | 1.738 g/cm3 | 3.12 g/cm3 |
Molar Volume | 13.984 cm3/mol | 19.78 cm3/mol |
Elastic Properties | ||
Young Modulus | 45 | - |
Shear Modulus | 17 GPa | - |
Bulk Modulus | 45 GPa | 1.9 GPa |
Poisson Ratio | 0.29 | - |
Hardness - Tests to Measure of Hardness of Element | ||
Mohs Hardness | 2.5 MPa | - |
Vickers Hardness | - | - |
Brinell Hardness | 260 MPa | - |
Electrical Properties | ||
Electrical Conductivity | 23000000 S/m | 1e-10 S/m |
Resistivity | 4.4e-8 m Ω | 10000000000 m Ω |
Superconducting Point | - | - |
Heat and Conduction Properties | ||
Thermal Conductivity | 160 W/(m K) | 0.12 W/(m K) |
Thermal Expansion | 0.0000082 /K | - |
Magnetic Properties | ||
Magnetic Type | Paramagnetic | Diamagnetic |
Curie Point | - | - |
Mass Magnetic Susceptibility | 6.9e-9 m3/kg | -4.9e-9 m3/kg |
Molar Magnetic Susceptibility | 1.68e-10 m3/mol | -7.83e-10 m3/mol |
Volume Magnetic Susceptibility | 0.000012 | -0.0000153 |
Optical Properties | ||
Refractive Index | - | 1.001132 |
Acoustic Properties | ||
Speed of Sound | 4602 m/s | - |
Thermal Properties - Enthalpies and thermodynamics
Melting Point | 923 K | 265.8 K |
Boiling Point | 1363 K | 332 K |
Critical Temperature | - | 588 K |
Superconducting Point | - | - |
Enthalpies | ||
Heat of Fusion | 8.7 kJ/mol | 5.8 kJ/mol |
Heat of Vaporization | 128 kJ/mol | 14.8 kJ/mol |
Heat of Combustion | -668 J/(kg K) | - |
Regulatory and Health - Health and Safety Parameters and Guidelines
CAS Number | CAS7439-95-4 | CAS7726-95-6 |
RTECS Number | - | RTECSEF9100000 |
DOT Hazard Class | 4.1 | 8 |
DOT Numbers | 2950 | 1744 |
EU Number | - | - |
NFPA Fire Rating | 1 | 0 |
NFPA Hazards | - | Oxidizing Agent |
NFPA Health Rating | 0 | 3 |
NFPA Reactivity Rating | 1 | 0 |
AutoIgnition Point | 472 °C | - |
Flashpoint | 500 °C | -18 °C |
Compare With Other Elements
Compare Magnesium with all Group 2 elementsMagnesium vs BerylliumMagnesium vs CalciumMagnesium vs StrontiumMagnesium vs BariumMagnesium vs Radium Compare Magnesium with all Period 3 elementsMagnesium vs SodiumMagnesium vs AluminiumMagnesium vs SiliconMagnesium vs PhosphorusMagnesium vs SulfurMagnesium vs ChlorineMagnesium vs Argon Compare Magnesium with all Alkaline Earth Metal elements | Compare Bromine with all Group 17 elementsCompare Bromine with all Period 4 elementsBromine vs PotassiumBromine vs CalciumBromine vs ScandiumBromine vs TitaniumBromine vs VanadiumBromine vs ChromiumBromine vs ManganeseBromine vs IronBromine vs CobaltBromine vs NickelBromine vs CopperBromine vs ZincBromine vs GalliumBromine vs GermaniumBromine vs ArsenicBromine vs SeleniumBromine vs Krypton Compare Bromine with all Halogens elements |