Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Corrosion involved ferrous oxide, or rust, and its reaction to open air.
The air is clean, and those ruddy layers of ferrous oxide have blown away.
Are you robbing us of our manganese and ferrous oxide?"
Unlike ferrous oxides, the hydroxides do not adhere to the bulk metal.
Already she tasted traces of ferrous oxide, calcium, and other minerals through her cilia.
Titanium dioxide with ferrous oxide gives rise to ilmenite.
The red hue it gives glass is complementary to the green hue given by ferrous oxides in the manufacturing process.
Ferrous oxide precipitates between pH 7 to 9:
The ratio of the elements present in the compound can fluctuate within certain limits, such as in the example of Ferrous oxide.
The conversion of the passivating ferrous oxide layer to rust results from the combined action of two agents, usually oxygen and water.
Since this oxidation state is lower than the other possibility (Fe), this compound is sometimes called ferrous oxide.
It can also be made by the reaction of ferrous oxide or ferrous hydroxide with concentrated acetic acid.
"Chemically speaking," Stern said, "it's exactly what you'd expect: iron in the form of ferrous oxide, mixed with gall as an organic binder.
Iron oxide deposits give water a reddish hue, as dissolved ferrous oxide becomes oxygenated at the surface and is precipitated.
A type of terracotta called "redware" was especially prized by the Greeks and Etruscans for its concentration of ferrous oxide giving it a red color.
Where Anaerobic organisms reduce ferric oxide to ferrous oxide, the reduced mineral compounds produce the gley soil typical color.
Iron(II) oxide, also known by its former name ferrous oxide or informally as iron monoxide, is one of the iron oxides.
An almandine in which the ferrous oxide is replaced partly by magnesia is found at Luisenfeld in German East Africa.
Iron(II) oxide (ferrous oxide)
Our best guess is that the core rods oxydized, only instead of creating ferrous oxide, or rust, the way steel rods do, these rods rusted pure plutonium.
For example, although wüstite (ferrous oxide) has an ideal (stoichiometric) formula FeO, the actual stoichiometry is closer to FeO.
The organism can consume non-magnetic ferric oxide (the main component of common iron rust) and strip away some oxygen to produce tiny crystals of magnetic ferrous oxide.
In ferrous oxide, Fe has oxidation number II, in ferric oxide, oxidation number III.
It helps to have the iron oxide as ferrous oxide (FeO) which is obtained via slight reducing conditions ie operating with zero excess oxygen at the kiln exit.
Ilmenite, a mixture of titanium dioxide and iron in the form of ferric/ferrous oxide, is treated with Sulphuric Acid to get Titanium dioxide and ferrous sulphate.