Yes, iron reacts with acids.
Hydrochloric acid can react with iron in the absence of air to produce iron chloride and hydrogen gas. The reaction between hydrochloric acid and iron is a chemical reaction that does not require oxygen from the air.
Iron sulfate (ferrous sulfate) does not react with sulfuric acid because it is already in the form of a salt with sulfuric acid - FeSO4. However, iron metal can react with sulfuric acid to form iron sulfate and hydrogen gas.
Yes, it does.
Yes, magnetite (Fe3O4) does react with acid. When exposed to acid, magnetite can undergo dissolution, releasing iron ions into solution and forming iron salts.
Iron does not react with nitric acid because nitric acid is a strong oxidizing agent that forms a protective oxide layer on the surface of iron, preventing further reaction. This oxide layer acts as a barrier, blocking the acid from reaching the iron underneath, thereby preventing the reaction to occur.
Hydrochloric acid and iron react to form iron chloride and hydrogen gas. This is a single displacement reaction where the iron displaces the hydrogen ion in hydrochloric acid.
You would need to react iron with sulfuric acid (H2SO4) to produce iron sulfate (FeSO4).
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When iron carbonate and formic acid react, carbon dioxide gas is evolved. The equation is FeCO3 + 2HCOOH -> Fe(HCOO)2 + CO2 + H2O. Iron formate and water are produced as well.
Yes it reacts to form Iron(II) sulfate and hydrogen gas
Yes, tin will react with sulphuric acid as it is reactive enough. Metals which are higher than hydrogen in the reactivity series will react with sulphuric acid.