The standard state of iron is solid, but it can be melted into a liquid.
we dont know cause wiki answers is so messed up
+2 oxidation state
Ferrous is a derivative of the latin word Ferrum, for Iron. Which is why iron on the periodic table is Fe. Ferrous is iron in a +2 state, and feric is iron in a +3 State. Ferrous sulfate is just FeSO4
Iron hydroxide. Fe(OH)2 or Fe(OH)3, depending on the oxidation state of iron (ferrous = +2, ferric = +3)
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
Iron(ll) hydrogen carbonate Fe(HCO3)2 Iron(lll) hydrogen carbonate Fe(HCO3)3
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.
The first Fe represents an iron atom in the 0 oxidation state while the Fe in Fe2O3 represents iron ion in the +2 oxidation state
+2 oxidation state
Ferrous is a derivative of the latin word Ferrum, for Iron. Which is why iron on the periodic table is Fe. Ferrous is iron in a +2 state, and feric is iron in a +3 State. Ferrous sulfate is just FeSO4
Iron hydroxide. Fe(OH)2 or Fe(OH)3, depending on the oxidation state of iron (ferrous = +2, ferric = +3)
Fe stands for Iron.
Iron (Fe)
no Fe is iron and iron is not
Iron (Fe): atomic number 26 and of course has 26 protons.
The element 'FE' represents iron. Hope this helped. -Sean
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.
'Fe' is iron. The symbol (Fe) comes from the Latin for iron, which is 'Ferrum'.