Iron sulfate is not an acid. It is a salt that is formed by the reaction between iron oxide or iron hydroxide with sulfuric acid. Iron sulfate is commonly used as a fertilizer or in water treatment processes.
Sodium hydrogen sulfate is an acid. It is also known as sodium bisulfate. It is commonly used in cleaning products and as a pH adjuster in various industrial applications.
The salt product formed when iron reacts with sulfuric acid is iron sulfate, also known as ferrous sulfate.
Rust is formed when iron reacts with oxygen in the presence of moisture, creating iron oxide. It is not an acid or an alkali but a chemical compound known as iron oxide.
You would need to react iron with sulfuric acid (H2SO4) to produce iron sulfate (FeSO4).
Iron sulphate can be both a reactant and a product, depending on the chemical reaction. It can react to form different compounds or be produced from the reaction of iron and sulphuric acid.
You would add iron oxide (rust) to sulfuric acid to produce iron sulfate and water in a chemical reaction.
Iron can be reacted with sulfuric acid to produce iron sulfate. Iron sulfate can also be produced by reacting iron with sodium hydroxide and sulfuric acid.
Iron oxide + Sulphuric Acid iron sulphate + water
Sulfuric Acid Iron + Sulfuric Acid= Iron Sulfate + Hydrogen gas Fe + H2SO4 → FeSO4 + H2
Iron + sulphuric acid ----> iron sulphate + hydrogen
It depends on which carbonate you are adding:Iron(II) carbonate + Sulphuric acid ----> Iron(II) sulphate + Water + Carbon dioxideFeCO3 + H2SO4 ----> FeSO4 + H2O + CO2Iron(III) carbonate + Sulphuric acid ----> Iron(III) sulphate + Water + Carbon dioxideFe2(CO3)3 + 3 H2SO4 ----> Fe2(SO4)3 + 3 H2O + 3 CO2