The individual ions in FeSO4 (Iron II sulfate) are Fe2+ and SO42-.
The formula for Iron(II) sulfate is FeSO4.
No.
FeSO4: the IUPAC name is "iron (II) sulfate", the "old" terminology for FeSO4 is "ferrous Sulfate"
Yes, ferrous sulfate or iron II sulfate, FeSO4, is a compound of iron, sulfur, and oxygen.
One to one
Iron (II) sulfate is the correct name for this compound. The Fe ion has a charge of 2 and so does the sulfate ion, so there is no subscript after them.
If an iron nail is placed in a copper(II) sulfate solution, the iron ions are exchanged with the copper ions, creating iron sulfate and copper (which precipitates out as copper metal). Fe + CuSO4 --> FeSO4 + Cu
The formula for Iron(II) sulfate is FeSO4.
Iron(II) sulfate. Or the older formula name, Ferrous sulfate.
These are the ions and their charges: Fe+2 SO4-2. The charges have to add up to zero, so one +2 iron ion cancels out one -2 sulfate ion. Therefore, the formula is FeSO4
No.
FeSO4: the IUPAC name is "iron (II) sulfate", the "old" terminology for FeSO4 is "ferrous Sulfate"
Yes, ferrous sulfate or iron II sulfate, FeSO4, is a compound of iron, sulfur, and oxygen.
One to one
Up to cca. 480 0C iron(II) sulfate lost crystallization water; after this temprature the sulfate is decomposed in iron oxide and sulfur oxide.
Six water molecules are bound to iron (II) ammonium sulfate.
iron and sulphuric acid