assuming you mean sodium plus iron II carbonate, the products are iron plus sodium carbonate. iron is a transitional metal which can make +2 or +3 ions, and YOU need to state that in your word equation. there no such thing as iron carbonate, but there is such thing as iron II carbonate and iron III carbonate
When iron sulfate and sodium carbonate are mixed, iron carbonate and sodium sulfate are produced. Iron carbonate is a solid precipitate that can be formed during the reaction, while sodium sulfate remains in solution.
When sodium carbonate reacts with cobalt II nitrate, cobalt II carbonate and sodium nitrate are formed. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: Na2CO3 + Co(NO3)2 -> CoCO3 + 2NaNO3. Both products are soluble in water.
Lithium carbonate + Iron(II) iodide ----> Lithium iodide + Iron(II) carbonateLi2CO3 + FeI2 ----> 2 LiI + FeCO3
The reaction between sodium and iron oxide would be a single displacement reaction, where sodium displaces iron from iron oxide to form sodium oxide and elemental iron. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is 4Na + Fe2O3 -> 2Na2O + 2Fe.
Ferric (Also known as Iron III) = Fe3+Carbonate = CO3 2-Fe3+ + CO3 2- = Fe2(CO3)3Remember that CARBONATE is POLYATOMIC which means you MUST BRACKET IT in the EQUATION*Note that ferric carbonate is not naturally occurring as is iron (II) carbonate, or siderite.
= iron hydroxide plus sodium chloride
When iron sulfate and sodium carbonate are mixed, iron carbonate and sodium sulfate are produced. Iron carbonate is a solid precipitate that can be formed during the reaction, while sodium sulfate remains in solution.
I am not sure that this reaction is possible; iron(III) bromide and iron(III) carbonate are not stable in water.
When sodium carbonate reacts with cobalt II nitrate, cobalt II carbonate and sodium nitrate are formed. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: Na2CO3 + Co(NO3)2 -> CoCO3 + 2NaNO3. Both products are soluble in water.
Iron(III) Nitrate + Sodium Bicarbonate ----> Iron(III) Carbonate + Sodium Nitrate + Water + Carbon Dioxide2 Fe(NO3)3 + 6 NaHCO3 ----> Fe2(CO3)3 + 6 NaNO3 + 3 H2O + 3 CO2
The balanced equation for iron carbonate (FeCO3) reacting with sulfuric acid (H2SO4) is: FeCO3 + H2SO4 -> FeSO4 + H2O + CO2
Iron chloride
Lithium carbonate + Iron(II) iodide ----> Lithium iodide + Iron(II) carbonateLi2CO3 + FeI2 ----> 2 LiI + FeCO3
iron :)
The molecular equation for iron chloride and sodium hydroxide is: FeCl3 + 3NaOH -> Fe(OH)3 + 3NaCl.
No, sodium carbonate does not cause rust. Rust is the result of iron oxidizing in the presence of moisture and oxygen. Sodium carbonate (also known as washing soda) is a water-soluble salt commonly used in cleaning products and does not promote rusting.
The balanced equation for iron sulfate (FeSO4) reacting with sodium hydroxide (NaOH) to form iron hydroxide (Fe(OH)3) and sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) is: FeSO4 + 2NaOH → Fe(OH)3 + Na2SO4