The answer is...sortof. Jeweler' Rouge (aka Fe2O3, hematite, ferric oxide) is an oxide of the iron isotope Fe3+. Iron oxide typically refers to the Fe2+ (ferrous) isotope and has the molecular structure FeO (aka rust) and occurs anywhere iron is exposed to air.
The right question should be: Does one mole of iron weigh the same as one mole of iron oxide? The answer is NO, Iron Oxide weighs more.
There are seven different types of iron oxide, all of which can be found in rust at some stage of the process. So the answer to your question is yes but there is a lot more to it than just that.
Nothing unless they are heated. If they are heated it will become iron oxide. Which is the same material that we find the ground
That doesn't make any sense rust is iron oxide
When rusting occurs, some of the outer metal converts to a crumbly iron oxide that doesn't have the same strength as the metal. The deeper the rusting goes into the metal , the weaker the bar will become.
Because the other iron oxides Fe3O4, Fe2O3 would have the same name. In order for this to not happen you should indicate the oxidation number of iron.
yes you can because the number of protons and electrons is the same in each. they also have the same atomic mass and number.
Lead won't rust in the same way as iron, a white oxide layer will appear overtime, but it won't break away as much as rust on iron.
The feminine word for "rouge" in French is "rouge", as it is the same in both masculine and feminine forms.
No, iron is naturally rusting under normal conditions, it isn't a noble metal. Iron differs from aluminum, for instance. The layer of aluminum oxide that forms on aluminum protects the underlying metal from further oxidation; rust does not have the same effect.
yes. it is the same kind of compound oxide
catalysts which are in the same phase to that of reactants and products