i dont no
when nitric acid and iron react together Iron Nitrate is formed and hydrogen gas
Nitric acid is oxidizing acid. When it reacts with iron it forms a protective layer of iron oxide over it. So it does not react further.
iron with concentrated nitric acid no reaction occurs becase of the iron passivity which is due to the oxidizing property of the acid were a layer of the metal oxide is formed which is complete and non porous so it protects the metal from further reaction
Iron Oxide is Fe[2]O[3] and Nitric acid is HNO[3]
hydrochloric acid reacts with iron when it starts bubbling , magnesium reacts more though .
when nitric acid and iron react together Iron Nitrate is formed and hydrogen gas
Nitric acid is oxidizing acid. When it reacts with iron it forms a protective layer of iron oxide over it. So it does not react further.
iron with concentrated nitric acid no reaction occurs becase of the iron passivity which is due to the oxidizing property of the acid were a layer of the metal oxide is formed which is complete and non porous so it protects the metal from further reaction
Iron Oxide is Fe[2]O[3] and Nitric acid is HNO[3]
hydrochloric acid reacts with iron when it starts bubbling , magnesium reacts more though .
Nitric acid + Iron ----> Iron(III) nitrate + Water + Nitrogen dioxide
You get iron nitrate and hydrogen gas.
HNO3
Quite effectively, actually. I was pickling a rusted bracket in nitric acid but I left it too long. The bracket was rust-free but the acid continued to eat the steel until it was paper-thin. You are better off using hydrochloric or phosphoric acid if you are prepping steel for painting. Both will open up the metal without eating it up.
I think, concentrated Nitric acid (HNO3)
Yes, iron reacts with acids.
Nitric acid(HNO3)