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Calcium carbonate (limestone) is used in blast furnaces to capture impurities and form a slag that floats above the molten iron to keep the impurities from mixing back into the iron.
When iron reacts with air, they form ferric oxide.
It seems unlikely that dolomite would react with iron to any significant degree. Dolomite is calcium magnesium carbonate; both calcium and magnesium are higher on the activity series than iron.
No. Dolomite is a mineral rock that is primarily composed of calcium carbonate but contains many other compounds including magnesium carbonates and oxides of silicon, aluminium, iron lithium, titanium, chromium, manganese, sodium, potassium and lithium. Adam.
Iron carbonate is formed from iron, carbon, and oxygen, where carbon and oxygen are in a carbonate ion (-2) form.Iron II carbonate (known as siderite) has the formula FeCO3, where iron has a valence of 2 and the carbonate ion has a valence of -2.Iron III carbonate (ferric carbonate) has the formula Fe2(CO3)2 where iron has a valence of 3.
Nope, Calcium is stronger then the iron so it keeps its hold on the carbonate
Iron
Iron will react with calcium oxide as iron is more reactive than calcium, therefore calcium (which is the more reactive metal) will displace calcium (the less reactive metal) to form a compound. This is called a displacement reaction.
Calcium carbonate (limestone) is used in blast furnaces to capture impurities and form a slag that floats above the molten iron to keep the impurities from mixing back into the iron.
silvouiridine potassium
Iron sulphide and water and carbon dioxide!
iron sulphide is formed
Yes. According to the activity series of metals, the calcium will replace the iron in the iron chloride compound, forming calcium chloride and iron. Refer to the related link for an activity series of metals.
i dont no
When iron reacts with air, they form ferric oxide.
it explodes
Among these calcium is highly reactive towards acids.