Primarygun Posted March 27, 2006 Posted March 27, 2006 Here I want to ask you a couple of questions.Thanks 1. What happens when ferrous hydroxide is heated strongly? My idea is that it would turn to ferrous oxide at once and later oxidizes by oxygen in air. And what's the colour of unhydrous ferrous oxide and hydroxide? 2.Does hypochlorite react with acidified potassium permanganate? Thanks for attention
h4tt3n Posted March 27, 2006 Posted March 27, 2006 If Ferrous hydroxides are heated above just a few hundred deg. C, water is split away as vapor. For instance: Ferrihydrite => hematite + water 5 Fe2O3.9 H2O(s) => 5 Fe2O3(s) + 9 H2O(g) Note that the ferrous oxide is neither oxidized nor reduced with heat alone! Regarding color... -Some of the oxides: Hematite Fe2O3 has a beautiful brownish red color. Magnetite Fe3O4 is blackish grey Wustite FeO is greyish blue -And The hydroxides: Goethite alpha-FeOOH is bright yellowish brown Lepidocrocite gamma-FeOOH is orange Ferrihydrite is reddish brown Best regards Michael
Primarygun Posted March 27, 2006 Author Posted March 27, 2006 Thanks. I'm afraid I gave the wrong detail to you. 1. What happens when ferrous hydroxide is heated strongly? It should be ferriic hydroxide. It's my fault, sorry may you figure it out once more?
RyanJ Posted March 27, 2006 Posted March 27, 2006 Thanks. I'm afraid I gave the wrong detail to you.1. What happens when ferrous hydroxide is heated strongly? It should be ferriic hydroxide. It's my fault' date=' sorry may you figure it out once more?[/quote'] Umm, there is no such compound, do you mean ferric hydroxide (AKA iron(III) hydroxide)? [ce]Fe(OH)3[/ce] If you do then it decomposes at about 500°C... Cheers, Ryan Jones
woelen Posted March 27, 2006 Posted March 27, 2006 Ferrous hydroxide certainly exists. It is an almost white solid. It is very easily oxidized though and then it durns olive-green. On even further oxidation it finally becomes rust/brown. At that stage it is converted to an iron (III) compound completely.
Primarygun Posted March 28, 2006 Author Posted March 28, 2006 ferriic hydroxide. Sorry, it is Iron(II) hydroxide. A question set in my examination asks about Will iron(II) hydroxide turn black upon strong heating?
RyanJ Posted March 28, 2006 Posted March 28, 2006 Sorry' date=' it is Iron(II) hydroxide.A question set in my examination asks about Will iron(II) hydroxide turn black upon strong heating?[/quote'] I would presume so... I can find very little information about iron(II) hydroxide... even the CRC book lack melting and boilling point information. Cheers, Ryan Jones
YT2095 Posted March 28, 2006 Posted March 28, 2006 all I have in mine is Fe(OH)2 and Fe(OH)3 decompose on heating, again, no temp given either. Fe2O3 is a red/brown and Fe3O4 is Black/red (and magnetic) but FeO is plain Black.
woelen Posted March 28, 2006 Posted March 28, 2006 Sorry' date=' it is Iron(II) hydroxide.A question set in my examination asks about Will iron(II) hydroxide turn black upon strong heating?[/quote'] Yes, it will, but it must be heated in an environment, absolutely free of oxygen, otherwise the iron in it is oxidized to the +3 oxidation state. I do not know, however, how much it must be heated.
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