Nitrogen is not necessary.
Nitrogen does not have the ability to rust. Rust is a term specifically used to describe the corrosion of iron and iron alloys. Nitrogen is a colorless, odorless gas that is chemically inert under normal conditions, meaning it does not undergo corrosion like iron does.
The cause of iron rust is oxygen and water.
it is either rust, steel, oxygen or nitrogen.
it is either rust, steel, oxygen or nitrogen.
Iron oxide is formed when iron, nitrogen, and oxygen are added together. It is a chemical compound that is commonly known as rust.
No, iron rusts through a process called oxidation when it combines with oxygen in the presence of moisture to form iron oxide. Nitrogen does not play a direct role in the rusting of iron.
Rust forms when iron or iron alloys are exposed to oxygen and moisture. The presence of oxygen allows for the oxidation of iron, leading to the formation of iron oxide (rust).
No: Rusting occurs by the combination of ferrous metals with oxygen from air or water, and nitrogen can not form the same compounds as oxygen does.
because you need to have solid iron for it to rust
Oxygen and water...... :)
No they will not get rust they are not iron to get rust. only iron get rust.
if rust is forming on a wheelbarrow, it is already magnetic. Rust is Iron Oxide, and a wheelbarrow must be made of iron if there is rust on it. Iron is always magnetic, so an iron wheelbarrow would be magnetic regardless of whether it had no rust or lots of rust on it.