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Yes, iron metal can reduce Fe³⁺ to Fe²⁺. In this reduction reaction, iron donates electrons to the Fe³⁺ ions, resulting in the conversion of the higher oxidation state (Fe³⁺) to the lower oxidation state (Fe²⁺). This process is part of redox chemistry, where iron acts as a reducing agent.
In the ion-electronic chemical equation Cr+3 + e-1 => Cr+2, the Cr+3 ion is reduced.
An electron plus an electron will repel each other due to their negative charges. This is because like charges repel each other according to the principles of electromagnetism.
In the redox reaction between silver nitrate (AgNO3) and sodium (Na) to produce sodium nitrate (NaNO3) and silver (Ag), sodium is oxidized from 0 to +1 oxidation state, losing one electron, while silver is reduced from +1 to 0 oxidation state, gaining one electron. Therefore, a total of one electron is transferred in this reaction.
There are four electrons in a Beryllium atom. Hence the mono positive ion has only three electrons. Therefore the electron configuration is 1s2 2s1.
In its ground state, the Ga3+ ion has 0 electrons in its outermost shell. This is because the Ga3+ ion has lost three electrons from its neutral Ga atom configuration, which changes the electron distribution.
Iron can exist in the body as ferrous or ferric, depending on what part of the biological process iron is in. For instance, iron in the plus two-oxidation state is "ferrous". Iron in the plus three-oxidation state is ferric.
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
Iron plus chlorine equals Iron chloride is the word equation.
In the ion-electronic chemical equation Cr+3 + e-1 => Cr+2, the Cr+3 ion is reduced.
The configuration of the lithium ion (Li⁺) is 1s². In its neutral state, lithium has the electron configuration of 1s² 2s¹, but when it loses one electron to become Li⁺, it loses the 2s electron, leaving only the 1s electrons.
i think so
An atom of potassium-41 becomes a potassium ion with a plus charge by losing one electron. Potassium-41 has 19 electrons in its neutral state, but when it loses one electron, it becomes a potassium ion (K+) with a plus charge and 18 electrons.
There is no elemental iron (Fe) involved in this reaction, neither as reactant (iron sulphide -FeS- plus oxygen are) nor as product (iron oxide (FeO) plus sulphur dioxide are)
Yes, Fe (iron) plus S (sulfur) equals FeS (iron sulfide). If the iron ion is iron(ll) then it is iron(ll) sulfide; if it is iron(lll), then it iron(lll) sulfide.
iron sulphate
An electron plus an electron will repel each other due to their negative charges. This is because like charges repel each other according to the principles of electromagnetism.