Iron works well with carbon and other metals. but i have no idea what they make.
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Elements such as oxygen, carbon, sulfur, and hydrogen are known to react with iron. Oxygen reacts with iron to form iron oxide (rust), carbon can form iron carbide, sulfur can form iron sulfide, and hydrogen can create iron hydride under certain conditions.
it can bond with oxygen to form rust or iron oxide. and it can bond with carbon to form steel
Rust is most of all 'metal oxide' which is chemically formed by reaction of certain metals (eg. iron, Fe) with oxygen (gas, 20% in air)
Yes, iron can displace tin from tin nitrate through a single displacement reaction to form iron(II) nitrate and tin.
When you mix iron, lithium, and neon together, you will have a mixture of three different elements. Iron is a metal, lithium is an alkali metal, and neon is a noble gas. The resulting mixture will not form a compound but will remain a physical blend of the individual elements.
Iron sulfate and copper do not react because copper is below iron in the reactivity series. This means iron is more reactive than copper, so iron sulfate will not displace copper from its compounds.
Yes, iron can react with chlorine to form iron chloride. Iron has multiple oxidation states, with the most common being iron(II) and iron(III) chloride when reacted with chlorine gas.
When sulfur and iron are heated together, they react to form iron sulfide. Iron sulfide is a compound, not a mixture, so it does not show the properties of its individual elements like sulfur and iron. The formation of this compound is a chemical reaction where the atoms of sulfur and iron rearrange to create a new substance with different properties.