Iron, being a metal, does not form molecules but exists as individual atoms.
One molecule of iron oxide (Fe2O3) contains two iron atoms per molecule. So, for every molecule of iron oxide, there are two iron atoms, which means one iron oxide molecule contains two iron atoms.
One molecule of iron oxide (Fe₂O₃) contains two iron atoms.
One molecule of iron oxide consists of one iron atom and one oxygen atom. Therefore, the total number of atoms in one molecule of iron oxide is two.
a. 1 iron atom per molecule. in total, two atoms
Yes. A molecule of Iron, only consists of one type of atom, namely, Iron
If a quarter of the mass of the molecule is iron and the mass of the molecule is 89600u, then the mass of iron is 22400u ... a quarter of the total mass.
iron
A molecule of iron consists of iron atoms bonded together. The most common form of iron is Fe2+, where two iron atoms are bonded together with a positive charge. So, in a molecule of iron, you would typically find two iron atoms bonded to each other.
The iron containing part of hemoglobin is the 'heme' molecule.
The former.
yes
Each molecule of iron oxide Fe2O3 contains 2 atoms of iron and 3 atoms of oxygen, making a total of 5 atoms in one molecule.