Yes. Cheap magnesium turnings off of eBay are probably literal waste from machining "magnesium" parts which are in reality some kind of high-magnesium
alloy. There are quite a number of these and they might well contain up to about 10% of aluminium, zinc, and other metals including rare earths. With these cheap
turnings, and even after degreasing and acid etching, they still react sluggishly with alkyl halides. Sonication helps, but the resulting reagent is
nearly opaque black in colour, presumably due to suspended particles of metallic stuff that is not magnesium. I've tried a few different eBay sellers
with similar results. In one case the seller described them as 99.9% pure but I'm pretty certain this was a total lie (I've caught the same seller
lying about such things before). They were also invariably coated in a light layer of oil.
On the other hand, 99.8% magnesium turnings from Sigma Aldrich (not specifically "Grignard grade", just bog standard) work very well - they react a
lot faster with the halide and the Grignard reagent solution is much lighter and less opaque/turbid. Also, I would describe them as irregular
granules, even though they were sold as "turnings" they are definitely not turnings in the sense of being chips produced by a lathe.
[Edited on 31-1-2020 by DavidJR] |