IRON(III) OXIDE

Iron(III) oxide
Sample of iron(III) oxide

Haematite unit cell
General
Other names Ferric oxide
Hematite
Molecular formula Fe2O3
Molar mass 159.69 g/mol
Appearance red-brown solid
CAS number 1317-60-8
[1309-37-1]
[1309-37-1] (Iron Oxide Red)]
Properties
Density and phase 5.24 g/cm3, solid
Solubility in water insoluble
Melting point 1565 °C (1838 K) ''decomp.''
Structure
Coordination
geometry
?
Crystal structure rhombohedral
Thermodynamic data
Std enthalpy of
formation
Δf''H''o298
−825.50 kJ/mol
Standard molar
entropy
''S''o298
87 J·K−1·mol−1
Hazards
MSDS External MSDS
EU classification not listed
Flash point non-flammable
Supplementary data page
Structure and
properties
''n'', εr, etc.
Thermodynamic
data
Phase behaviour
Solid, liquid, gas
Spectral data UV, IR, NMR, MS
Related compounds
Other anions Iron(II) sulfide
Other cations Iron(II) oxide
Iron(II,III) oxide
Ruthenium(IV) oxide
Osmium(IV) oxide
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for
materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa)

'Iron(III) oxide' — also known as 'ferric oxide', 'Hematite', 'red iron oxide', 'synthetic maghemite', 'colcothar', or simply 'rust' — is one of the several oxide compounds of iron, and has paramagnetic properties. Its chemical formula is Fe2O3.

Contents
Different forms
Uses
See also
General references
Notes
External links

Different forms


The mineral form of ferric oxide is hematite; it is mined as the main ore of iron.

Uses


Iron(III) oxide is often used in magnetic storage, for example in the magnetic layer of floppy disks. These consist of a thin sheet of PET film, coated with iron(III) oxide. The particles can be magnetised to represent binary data. MICR (Magnetic Ink Character Recognition) also uses iron(III) oxide compounds, suspended in an ink which can be read by special scanning hardware.
A very fine powder of ferric oxide is known as 'jeweller's rouge', 'red rouge', or simply 'rouge'. It is used to put the final polish on metallic jewellery and lenses, and historically as a cosmetic.
Rouge cuts slower than some modern polishes, such as cerium(IV) oxide, but is still used in optics fabrication and by jewelers for the superior finish it can produce. When polishing gold, the rouge slightly stains the gold, which contributes to the appearance of the finished piece. Rouge is sold as a powder, paste, laced on polishing cloths, or solid bar (with a wax or grease binder). Other polishing compounds are also often called "rouge", even when they do not contain iron oxide. Jewelers remove the residual rouge on jewelry by use of ultrasonic cleaning.
Iron(III) oxide is used in the production of pure iron in a blast furnace.
Iron(III) oxide is also used in an extremely exothermic reaction called a thermite reaction.[1]
2 Al + Fe2O3 → 2 Fe + Al2O3
Iron(III) oxide is also used as a pigment, under names 'Pigment Black 11', 'Pigment Brown 6', 'Pigment Brown 7', and 'Pigment Red 101' (also 'Iron Oxide Red'). Some of them, eg. Pigment Red 101 and Pigment Brown 6, are Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved for use in cosmetics.

See also



Iron oxides

Iron(II) oxide

Magnetite (Iron(II,III) oxide)

Red ochre

Rust

General references


N. N. Greenwood, A. Earnshaw, ''Chemistry of the Elements'', Pergamon Press, 1984.

Notes


1. Adlam & Price, ''Higher School Certificate Inorganic Chemistry'', Leslie Slater Price, 1945.


External links



NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards

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