Na2SO4 + Fe(OH)3
FeSO4 + 2NaOH = Na2SO4(sodium sulphate] + Fe(OH)2 [iron(II) hydroxide / ferrous hydroxide].
Iron oxide is with oxygen poopys
iron chloride + sodium hydroxide = sodium chloride +iron hydroxide
Iron chloride and sodium hydroxide will make iron hydroxide and sodium chloride. For Iron II chloride the equation is: 2NaOH(aq) + FeCl2(aq) --> 2NaCl(aq) + Fe(OH)2(S). For Iron III chloride the equation is: 3NaOH(aq) + FeCl3(aq) --> 3NaCl(aq) + Fe(OH)3(S).
FeCl3 + NaOH
Iron Sulphate + Sodium Hydroxide -> Sodium Sulphate (Na2SO4) and Iron Hydroxide (Fe(OH)2)
Sodium displaces the sulfate to make sodium sulfate; iron displaces the hydroxide to make ferrous hydroxide which becomes brown.
FeSO4 + 2NaOH = Na2SO4(sodium sulphate] + Fe(OH)2 [iron(II) hydroxide / ferrous hydroxide].
It produces a reddish precipitate of Iron(III) hydroxide and Sodium sulfate: Fe2(SO4)3 + NaOH ----> Fe(OH)3 + Na2SO4
FeSO4 + 2NaOH ---> Fe(OH)2 + Na2SO4
2Fe(SO4)3 + 6KOH ---> 2Fe(OH)3 + 3K2(SO4) iron 3 is +3, sulfate is -2, potasium is +1, and hydroxide is -1
= iron hydroxide plus sodium chloride
Iron oxide is with oxygen poopys
You get Iron (III) Hydroxide and Sodium Nitrate. It is a double displacement chemical reaction...
Iron Chloride + Sodium Hydroxide ------> Iron Hydroxide + Sodium Chloride Balanced reaction equations: FeCl3 + 3NaOH ------> Fe(OH)3 + 3NaCl or FeCl2 + 2NaOH ------> Fe(OH)2 + 2NaCl because iron can be either Iron(III)[Fe3+] or Iron(II)[Fe2+]
The iron(III) hydroxide is not soluble in water and doesn't react with sodium chloride.
iron chloride + sodium hydroxide = sodium chloride +iron hydroxide