Ferric Iron. H2SO4 is sulfuric acid, so therefore mixing it with any metal would make a "ferric *insert metal here*" name.
Iron (II) Sulfate is the salt: FeSO4
Fe + H2SO4 ----> FeSO4 + H2 Products are Iron(II) Sulphate and Hydrogen Gas
Fe is elemental iron and H2SO4 sulfuric acid. They'd react like: Fe(s) + H2SO4(aq) --> FeSO4(aq) + H2(g) FeSO4, iron(II)sulfate or ferrous sulfate H2, Hydrogen gas
Fe2O3 + H2SO4
Sulfuric acid is H2SO4. Iron is Fe. Because iron is a more active metal than hydrogen, it can displace hydrogen from the sulfuric acid. Fe (s) + H2SO4 (aq) --> FeSO4 (aq) + H2 (g)
Iron (II) Sulfate is the salt: FeSO4
Fe + H2SO4 ----> FeSO4 + H2 Products are Iron(II) Sulphate and Hydrogen Gas
Fe is elemental iron and H2SO4 sulfuric acid. They'd react like: Fe(s) + H2SO4(aq) --> FeSO4(aq) + H2(g) FeSO4, iron(II)sulfate or ferrous sulfate H2, Hydrogen gas
Fe2O3 + H2SO4
Sulfuric acid is H2SO4. Iron is Fe. Because iron is a more active metal than hydrogen, it can displace hydrogen from the sulfuric acid. Fe (s) + H2SO4 (aq) --> FeSO4 (aq) + H2 (g)
H2SO4+Hg
Pb + PbO2 + H2SO4 --> PbSO4 + H2O
Br2 + 2H2O + SO2 = H2SO4 + 2HBr
LiCl+H2SO4=LiHSO4+HCl
h2c204+h2so4
H2SO4 + ZnO => H2O + ZnSO4
H2SO4 + Fe = FeSO4 + H2