Magnetite (Fe3O4) and hematite (Fe2O3) are the primary iron ores, but there is also goethite, limonite and siderite. Wikipedia has a nice article on iron ore, and it's brief and easy to read. Need a link? You got it.
That would depend on whether it is iron II chlorate or iron III chlorate. Iron II chlorate is Fe(ClO3)2. Iron III chlorate is Fe(ClO3)3
Yes. It is the alchemy name for Iron. Thats why Irons periodic table name is 'Fe'
Iron nitrates are: - Fe(II)(NO3)2 - Fe(III)(NO3)3
Iron(ll) hydrogen carbonate Fe(HCO3)2 Iron(lll) hydrogen carbonate Fe(HCO3)3
(MnO4)2- is the chemical formula of manganate ion.
The name of the element Fe is iron.
Fe is Iron. It isn't 'Ir' because they got Fe from iron's Latin name, ferum. It also can't be 'Ir' because Ir is already the symbol for another element, iridium.
Iron is the standard chemical name. 'Ferric' is used to refer specifically to a compound containing iron in the 3+ oxidation state, while 'ferrous' is used for the 2+ state. Both originate in the Latin name ferrum, meaning iron.
Iron (Fe): atomic number 26 and of course has 26 protons.
The chemical symbol Fe represents the element iron.
Common name, iron. Fe is an abbreviation of ferrous (latin for iron).
"Fe" is the symbol for ironas the old latin name for the metal is "ferrum"
iron.
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Fe
Elements don't have formula they have symbols, Symbol for iron is Fe. It is derived from iron's Latin name Ferrum.
It is element 26, Iron