nope
Manganese itself does not rust, as rust is a form of iron oxide that occurs when iron reacts with oxygen in the presence of water. However, manganese can undergo oxidation and form its own compounds when exposed to certain conditions, but this is not the same as rusting.
Manganese is a metalic element and does not have brothers or sisters.
iron and manganese
Manganese dioxide (MnO2) contains the elements manganese and oxygen.
they are iron nickel cobalt and manganese
It is an exporter of oil, manganese and iron.
High doses of manganese may inhibit the absorption of iron, copper, and zinc. Alternatively, high intakes of magnesium, calcium, phosphorus, iron, copper, and zinc may inhibit the absorption of manganese.
Thomas Leonard Joseph has written: 'Minnesota manganiferous iron ore in relation to the iron and steel industry' -- subject(s): Iron ores, Manganese, Manganese steel
Sulfur in steel is considered injurious except when added to enhance machinability. Sulfur readilly combines with iron to form a low melting iron sulphide. Sulfur causes hot shortness in steel unless sufficient manganese is added. Sulfur has a greater affinity for manganese than iron and forms manganese sulphide which has a meltin point above the hot rolling temperature of steel, which eliminates hot shortness. By hot shortness we mean that the steel will literally break apart during hot rolling resulting in a scrapped product
considering it only contains iron (Fe) and chlorine (Cl), none.
Iron-II, Iron-III and Manganese-IV oxide
It is an exporter of oil, manganese and iron.