what is iron rate per kilo
Exposure to water and oxygen accelerates the rate of iron rusting. Additionally, high levels of acidity in the environment, as well as the presence of salts or pollutants, can also increase the rate of iron corrosion.
The rate at which the iron rusts can be described as the fraction of the original mass that converts to rust over a specific time period. In this case, if one quarter of a 1-mole piece of iron rusts in six months, the rusting rate is 0.25 moles per 6 months. This can be expressed as approximately 0.0417 moles of iron rusting per month.
Nope,believe it or not they actually make iron beams/steel for bridges that is made to form a protective coating of rust to prevent the iron/steel from corroding/oxidizing away over time.then they have a primer paint that is made to etch into the rust coating bonding to it.this is all i know.so it depends on if you mean pure iron/steel or alloys.or the treatment of the iron when it is made
If it is pure iron then by definition there is no carbon or anything else present in it, just iron.
what is iron rate per kilo
ancient cultures had to mine caves and holes to find iron like we do today. However, they did not have the tools we have today and/or the tech so it took them much, much longer to locate iron and get it out of the earth. :-)
Bronze does not rust the way that iron does, bronze will corrode, but at a much slower rate than iron.
Much of Europe
they are much lower
Exchange rate varies, $8.00 meal today would be (ja684.88) rate today is 1usd/85.61jad.
Iron and steel are recycled at a high rate because they are durable materials that can be recycled repeatedly without losing quality. Additionally, recycling iron and steel saves energy and reduces the need for mining and processing new raw materials. This makes it economically and environmentally beneficial to recycle iron and steel.
$15.93 by today's exchange rate (via Google).
in what currency....if Stirling then £17132.74336 at today's rate of exchange
$80.03 at today's exchange rate.
It is worth about $0.08 at today's exchange rate
Oxidation of iron in any rock is a very rapid process resulting from exposure of the pure iron within the rock to free oxygen. The red iron oxide that we see in sedimentary rocks today was formed millions of years ago during oxygenation events.