Iron works well with carbon and other metals. but i have no idea what they make.
it can bond with oxygen to form rust or iron oxide. and it can bond with carbon to form steel
Copper oxide
Zinc oxide
done today in chemistry :)
it reacts really well with Dave bakers hair
Rust is most of all 'metal oxide' which is chemically formed by reaction of certain metals (eg. iron, Fe) with oxygen (gas, 20% in air)
will manganese combine with other elements
Oxide
iron being highly electropositive it does not react with covalent compound formed by two electropositive elements. that is tin nitride.
Iron, lithium, and neon do not actually mix, nor do they chemically react with each other (although iron and lithium react with other elements such as oxygen). Iron is much denser than lithium, so if you poured these two metals into a container in their molten state, the lithium would just float on top of the iron. And Neon is an inert gas.
because copper is below iron in electrochemical series that's why it doesnt react with iron sulphate.
iron bromide
Yes, it would.
The elements will react and will form iron sulfide, which is a compound.
iron and sulphur
iron being highly electropositive it does not react with covalent compound formed by two electropositive elements. that is tin nitride.
Yes, these elements react to form iron sulfide, FeS.
DYUUNII
Well one is iron...
No, without melting they don't react.
All these elements are metal. They have same properties.
It depends on the metal. Gold will react with other elements with great difficulty. There are gold compounds, but if you have a solid chunk of gold it'll basically sit there and do nothing. Titanium and aluminum are pretty reactive. Iron reacts pretty well with oxygen. At the far end of the scale, sodium goes out of its way to react with other elements.
It depends on the metal. Gold will react with other elements with great difficulty. There are gold compounds, but if you have a solid chunk of gold it'll basically sit there and do nothing. Titanium and aluminum are pretty reactive. Iron reacts pretty well with oxygen. At the far end of the scale, sodium goes out of its way to react with other elements.
iron being highly electropositive it does not react with covalent compound formed by two electropositive elements. that is tin nitride.
Chlorine reacts violently with a large number of elements.