it is either rust, steel, oxygen or nitrogen.
Another name for iron oxide is rust.
The name of the compound Fe3O4 is called iron (II,III) oxide. (Wikipedia)
Iron Oxide Its actually Iron(ii) Oxide there is no such thing as iron oxide.
Iron oxide is called rust.
ferrous oxide -or- iron(II) oxide
iron oxide, in other words rust
Another name for iron oxide is rust.
The name of the compound Fe3O4 is called iron (II,III) oxide. (Wikipedia)
Iron Oxide Its actually Iron(ii) Oxide there is no such thing as iron oxide.
Iron oxide is called rust.
Iron(III)Oxide
ferrous oxide -or- iron(II) oxide
No such compound exists. If it did it would be iron VI oxide, but iron cannot reach such a high oxidation state. Perhaps you mean Fe2O3, iron III oxide.
Fe2O3 is named iron(III) oxide because it contains iron in its +3 oxidation state. The Roman numeral III in parentheses indicates the oxidation state of iron in the compound. Additionally, the name helps differentiate it from other iron oxides like FeO (iron(II) oxide) and Fe3O4 (iron(II,III) oxide).
FeO is Iron(II)oxide, archaically , Ferrous oxide. Do NOT confuse with Fe2O3, which is Iron(III)oxide ; Archaically Ferric oxide. The 'iron' atom is in different oxidation states for these two compounds. NB 'Fe' is the chemical symbol for 'Iron', and comes from Latin 'Ferrum' for iron.
The scientific name for rusting is iron oxidation, which is the process where iron reacts with oxygen in the presence of water or moisture to form iron oxide, commonly known as rust.
Iron oxide is commonly referred to as rust.