Iron(II) sulfate. Or the older formula name, Ferrous sulfate.
FeSO4 stands for ferrous sulfate. however it is a compound and does not appear on the periodic table periodic table consists of only elements, not compounds
The solution of CuSO4 is blue.The solution of FeSO4 is green.
FeSO4 (ferrous sulphate) a total of 6 atoms 4 of which are oxygen
Iron sulfates are FeSO4 and Fe2(SO4)3; both are dissociated in water.
1.FeSO4 dissociation in water produces more H ions which is acidic. 2.FeSO4 is formed by strong acid and weak base. 3.Sulfuric acid is strong acid and ferric hydroxide is weak base. 4.As the strong acid and weak base combines it results in the formation of acidic salt. H2SO4+Fe(OH)2 gives FeSO4+2H2O
FeSO4 stands for ferrous sulfate. however it is a compound and does not appear on the periodic table periodic table consists of only elements, not compounds
One assumes this is a single displacement reaction. 2Au + FeSO4 --> Au2SO4 + Fe
The formula FeSO4.NO does not correspond to a valid chemical compound. It seems to be a typographical error or incorrect notation.
The chemical formula of ferrous sulphate is FeSO4.
The formula for Iron(II) sulfate is FeSO4.
The solution of CuSO4 is blue.The solution of FeSO4 is green.
The chemical formula for ferrous sulfate is FeSO4.
The chemical formula for iron (II) sulfate is FeSO4.
When ferrous sulfate heptahydrate crystals (FeSO4·7H2O) are heated, they undergo a dehydration reaction to form anhydrous ferrous sulfate (FeSO4) and water vapor (H2O). The chemical equation for this reaction is: FeSO4·7H2O(s) → FeSO4(s) + 7H2O(g)
The chemical formula is... Fe2S3
The name for the ionic compound FeSO4 is Iron(II) sulfate.
The reaction between FeSO4 (iron(II) sulfate) and BaCl2 (barium chloride) will produce a precipitate of barium sulfate (BaSO4) and iron(II) chloride (FeCl2) in solution. The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is: FeSO4 + BaCl2 -> BaSO4 + FeCl2.