The iron would not rust, because calcium chloride is a desiccant. For rusting to occur there are two vital components: water and oxygen. Since calcium chloride is a desiccant, it would absorb the water, so rusting would not occur.
No, rust is another term for oxidation, therefore, rust is Iron oxide. Also, Chlorine only reacts with Iron when the Iron is heated, this makes Iron(III) chloride.
It doesn't rust but it after about a day you will see that the nail has polished and is completely clean
CaCl is extremely hygroscopic (water-attracting), so it will take up any moisture and keep the iron nail dry. Two conditions for rusting are oxygen and water.
chromium (III) bromide calcium chloride OR iron (III) oxide aluminum chloride
The correct name for the compound CaCl2 6H2O is Calcium Chloride Hexahydrate.
Yes, it is possible; supplemetary the chloride ion is corrosive.
Yes. According to the activity series of metals, the calcium will replace the iron in the iron chloride compound, forming calcium chloride and iron. Refer to the related link for an activity series of metals.
The chloride ion (Cl-) is corrosive for metals.
yes
RUST
No. Calcium chloride is a cousin of sodium chloride- table salt. Likely to increase the hazard of RUST. There are other materials, such as silica gel, that are effective means of contolling moisture. But calcium chloride is not.
No, rust is another term for oxidation, therefore, rust is Iron oxide. Also, Chlorine only reacts with Iron when the Iron is heated, this makes Iron(III) chloride.
It doesn't rust but it after about a day you will see that the nail has polished and is completely clean
CaCl is extremely hygroscopic (water-attracting), so it will take up any moisture and keep the iron nail dry. Two conditions for rusting are oxygen and water.
The ion chloride (Cl-) has a corrosive effect.
The iron will not react unless you react it with calcium chloride. This is because Chloride is very electronegative (it has a high affinity for electrons) Both iron and calcium are not very electronegative and would like to give away their electrons. The Chloride ion accepts these electrons to get a full valent shell.
chromium (III) bromide calcium chloride OR iron (III) oxide aluminum chloride