There are zinc and iron pills at the pharmacy.
No, zinc oxide and iron will not react with each other under normal conditions. Zinc oxide is a stable compound and does not readily react with iron to form a new compound.
No, there would be no reaction present. This is because the particles are more reactive in the zinc then they are in the iron, thus creating no displacement reaction to occur between the metals.
A metal like iron or magnesium can remove zinc from a solution through a redox reaction where the more reactive metal displaces the less reactive zinc ions. For example, iron can displace zinc from a solution containing zinc ions to form iron ions and solid zinc.
When iron is mixed with zinc oxide and heated, a redox reaction occurs where the iron reduces the zinc oxide to form zinc and iron oxide. The temperature needed for this reaction is significantly higher than normal atmospheric conditions.
Metals such as iron (Fe) and zinc (Zn) commonly form oxides (in combination with oxygen). Iron(II)Oxide is Fe0. Zinc oxide is ZnO.If the question intended to ask "what is formed when they react together" the answer is, they don't form compounds because they are cations (positive ions in an ionic compound).
When zinc metal is added to iron(II) sulfate solution, a single displacement reaction occurs where zinc displaces iron to form zinc sulfate solution and iron metal. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: Zn(s) + FeSO4(aq) -> ZnSO4(aq) + Fe(s)
It is the element zinc in its molten state that we dip iron or steel into to galvanize it.
Zinc can displace iron from iron chloride. This is because zinc is higher in the reactivity series than iron. Copper, however, cannot displace iron from iron chloride as it is lower in the reactivity series than iron.
Its Iron and vitamin supplements. Mostly it contains iron in some organic form.
one example is zinc+iron sulphate= iron+ zinc sulphate
Zinc is typically used in the process of galvanizing iron. The iron is dipped into a bath of molten zinc, which forms a protective zinc coating on the surface of the iron to prevent corrosion.
in what? without knowing in what system the zinc is replacing iron, the answer cannot be fully given. Only a generalization of Zn and Fe both being in a +2 oxidation state would allow one to replace the other.