Fe(HSO3)2
The nomenclature for iron (II) bisulfite is iron(II) hydrogen sulfite or ferrous bisulfite.
Fe(II)(HSO3)2 Iron(II) bisulphite . NB sulphurous acid is H2SO3 . Its anion is Sulphite (SO3^2-) The ''bi' means the sulphurous acid has only 'lost' ONE(1) hydrogen Hence the sulphite becomes the 'bisulphite' (HSO3^-) Since the iron is in oxidation state '2' , its cation is Fe^2+. Hence it needs two 'bisulphite' anions to balance the charges. NNB Do not confuse the 'bi' to mean 'two'. In this case it refers to the loss of hydrogen from the acid, in a similar way to sodium bi-carbonate (NaHCO3). Hope that helps!!!!
The compound FeSO4 can be named as iron(II) sulfate in both Stock and classical nomenclature systems.
The nomenclature for FeCl3 is iron(III) chloride. It indicates that the iron ion in the compound has a 3+ charge, forming a compound with three chloride ions.
This does not exist. If it did, it would probably be something like "Copper(III) hydrogen sulfide"
To synthesize Iron II bromide from Iron II carbonate, you would first react Iron II carbonate with hydrobromic acid to form Iron II bromide and water. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: FeCO3 + 2HBr → FeBr2 + H2O + CO2. The Iron II bromide can be obtained by isolating and purifying it from the reaction mixture.
The name of the compound iron II and oxygen (FeO) is iron(II) oxide - the correct name after the inorganic chemistry nomenclature of IUPAC - or ferrous oxide.
Sn(HSO3)2
Fe(II)(HSO3)2 Iron(II) bisulphite . NB sulphurous acid is H2SO3 . Its anion is Sulphite (SO3^2-) The ''bi' means the sulphurous acid has only 'lost' ONE(1) hydrogen Hence the sulphite becomes the 'bisulphite' (HSO3^-) Since the iron is in oxidation state '2' , its cation is Fe^2+. Hence it needs two 'bisulphite' anions to balance the charges. NNB Do not confuse the 'bi' to mean 'two'. In this case it refers to the loss of hydrogen from the acid, in a similar way to sodium bi-carbonate (NaHCO3). Hope that helps!!!!
It is not an element, it's a compound. It would be called iron (II) bromide in the IUPAC system, or ferrous bromide in the antiquated pre-IUPAC nomenclature.
The compound FeSO4 can be named as iron(II) sulfate in both Stock and classical nomenclature systems.
The nomenclature for FeCl3 is iron(III) chloride. It indicates that the iron ion in the compound has a 3+ charge, forming a compound with three chloride ions.
Bisulfite ion is the ion HSO3−
This does not exist. If it did, it would probably be something like "Copper(III) hydrogen sulfide"
Lead(II) oxide
To synthesize Iron II bromide from Iron II carbonate, you would first react Iron II carbonate with hydrobromic acid to form Iron II bromide and water. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: FeCO3 + 2HBr → FeBr2 + H2O + CO2. The Iron II bromide can be obtained by isolating and purifying it from the reaction mixture.
It is Iron-(II)-bromine
Iron(III)nitride