IRON

metallic chemical element; symbol Fe [Lat. ferrum]; at. no. 26; at. wt. 55.847; m.p. about 1,535 degrees Celsius; b.p. about 2,750 degrees Celsius; sp. gr. 7.87 at 20 degrees Celsius; valence +2, +3, +4, or +6. Iron is biologically significant. Because iron is a component of hemoglobin, a red oxygen-carrying pigment of the red blood cells of vertebrates, iron compounds are important in nutrition; one cause of anemia is iron deficiency. For the history of the use of iron, see Iron Age.

Properties

Iron is a lustrous, ductile, malleable, silver-gray metal (group VIII of the periodic table). It is known to exist in four distinct crystalline forms (see allotropy). The most common is the α-form, which is stable below about 770 degrees Celsius, and has a body-centered cubic crystalline structure; it is often called ferrite. Iron is attracted by a magnet and is itself easily magnetized (see magnetism). It is a good conductor of heat and electricity. It displaces hydrogen from hydrochloric or dilute sulfuric acid, but becomes passive (loses its normal chemical activity) when treated with cold nitric acid.

Compounds

Iron forms such compounds as oxides, hydroxides, halides, acetates, carbonates, sulfides, nitrates, sulfates, and a number of complex ions. It is chemically active and forms two major series of chemical compounds, the bivalent iron (II), or ferrous, compounds and the trivalent iron (III), or ferric, compounds. Ferrous sulfate heptahydrate, FeSO4·7H2O, sometimes called green vitriol, is a compound formed by the reaction of dilute sulfuric acid (formerly called oil of vitriol) with metallic iron; it is used in the manufacture of ink, in dyeing, and as a disinfectant. Ferric chloride hexahydrate, FeCl3·6H2O, is a yellow-brown crystalline compound used as a mordant in dyeing and as an etching compound. Ferric oxide, Fe2O3, is a reddish-brown powder used as a paint pigment and in abrasive rouges. Prussian blue, KFe2(CN)6, is a pigment containing the ferrocyanide complex ion. Iron rusts readily in moist air, forming a complex mixture of compounds that is mostly a ferrous-ferric oxide with the composition Fe3O4.

Natural Occurrence

Iron is an abundant element in the universe; it is found in many stars, including the sun. Iron is the fourth most abundant element in the earth's crust, of which it constitutes about 5% by weight, and is believed to be the major component of the earth's core. Iron is found distributed in the soil in low concentrations and is found dissolved in groundwaters and the ocean to a limited extent. It is rarely found uncombined in nature except in meteorites, but iron ores and minerals are abundant and widely distributed.

The principal ores of iron are hematite (ferric oxide, Fe2O3) and limonite (ferric oxide trihydrate, Fe2O3·3H2O). Other ores include siderite (ferrous carbonate, FeCO3), taconite (an iron silicate), and magnetite (ferrous-ferric oxide, Fe3O4), which often occurs as a white sand. Iron pyrite (iron disulfide, FeS2) is a crystalline gold-colored mineral known as fool's gold. Chromite is a chromium ore that contains iron. Lodestone is a form of magnetite that exhibits natural magnetic properties.

Production and Refining

Iron is produced in the United States chiefly from oxide ores. For many years rich hematite ores were produced by open-pit mining in the Mesabi Range near Lake Superior. However, these ores have been largely depleted, and iron is now produced from low-grade ores that are treated to improve their quality; this process is called beneficiation. Iron ores are refined in the blast furnace. The product of the blast furnace is called pig iron and contains about 4% carbon and small amounts of manganese, silicon, phosphorus, and sulfur. About 95% of this iron is processed further to make steel, often by the open-hearth process or the Bessemer process, but more recently in the United States and other countries by the basic oxygen process or by an electric arc furnace. The balance is cast in sand molds into blocks called pigs. It is further processed in iron foundries (see casting).

Cast Iron

Cast iron is made when pig iron is remelted in small cupola furnaces (similar to the blast furnace in design and operation) and poured into molds to make castings. It usually contains 2% to 6% carbon. Scrap iron or steel is often added to vary the composition. Cast iron is used extensively to make machine parts, engine cylinder blocks, stoves, pipes, steam radiators, and many other products. Gray cast iron, or gray iron, is produced when the iron in the mold is cooled slowly. Part of the carbon separates out in plates in the form of graphite but remains physically mixed in the iron. Gray iron is brittle but soft and easily machined. White cast iron, or white iron, which is harder and more brittle, is made by cooling the molten iron rapidly. The carbon remains distributed throughout the iron as cementite (iron carbide, Fe3C). A malleable cast iron can be made by annealing white iron castings in a special furnace. Some of the carbon separates from the cementite; it is much more finely divided than in gray iron. A ductile iron may be prepared by adding magnesium to the molten pig iron; when the iron is cast the carbon forms tiny spherical nodules around the magnesium. Ductile iron is strong, shock resistant, and easily machined.

Wrought Iron

Wrought iron is commercially purified iron. In the Aston process, pig iron is refined in a Bessemer converter and then poured into molten iron silicate slag. The resulting semisolid mass is passed between rollers that squeeze out most of the slag. The wrought iron has a fibrous structure with threads of slag running through it; it is tough, malleable, ductile, corrosion resistant, and melts only at high temperatures. It is used to make rivets, bolts, pipes, chains, and anchors, and is also used for ornamental ironwork.

Bibliography

See W. H. Dennis, Metallurgy of the Ferrous Metals (1963) and Foundations of Iron and Steel Metallurgy (1967).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...Perm and Sverdlovsk Eka erinburg in the middle IRON-MAKING SOCIETIES IRON-MAKING SOCIETIES Early Industrial Development...Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Iron-making societies: early industrial development in...
Iron Age Communities in Britain Iron Age Communities in Britain An account of England, Scotland and...of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Cunliffe, Barry W. Iron Age communities in Britain: an account of England, Scotland and Wales...
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Effects of iron treatment on cognitive performance and working memory in non-anaemic, iron-deficient girls. by Anthony Lambert...is described in which 116 adolescent girls with iron deficiency in the absence of anaemia were randomly...
The Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company Collections Northern Michigan University...by Terry S. Reynolds The iron-ore-mining industry has been the single...example, emerged near the more successful iron mines or their ports. Because iron mining...
Iron Plays a Major Role in Nutrition. by Clare Ulrich From infant formula to flour, iron-fortified foods are so commonplace on U.S. grocery shelves--and have been since the 1940s--that few Americans realize iron deficiency is one of the most prevalent forms of malnutrition...
...of tariff formation: the case of the iron and steel industry, 1900-1926 by...about the nature of protection was the iron and steel industry. It would normally be expected that an industry like iron and steel would have been one of the...
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Preventing Childhood Poisoning: Iron-Containing Products Remain the Biggest...T. Hingley ILLUSTRATION OMITTED Iron-containing products remain the biggest...poisonings caused by accidental overdoses of iron-containing supplements are the biggest...
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Seismic Speed Traps: Iron-Rich Regions May Slow Deep-Earth Vibes. by S. Perkins Large quantities of iron-rich minerals may be responsible for the...kilometers below Earths surface, molten iron from the planets core meets a thick, overlying...
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Iron Man Gamely Plays against Stark Weaponry. Byline: Joseph...currently in theaters, but hes also a video game star in Iron Man (Sega for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, rated T for teen...hands - personally. He becomes more than a man. He becomes Iron Man. Characters character: Developers expand on the movies...
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Iron Man Must Stop Mandarin. Byline: Joseph Szadkowski, THE WASHINGTON TIMES This chronic feature lets me review...recently passed my bloodshot pupils. So pull up a chair, break out the sarcasm filter and welcome to: Mr. Zads Iron Man comic critique Iron Man: Enter the Mandarin, Nos. 1 to 6 (Marvel Publishing, $2.99 each) Joe Casey, famed writer of the X-Men universe...
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encyclopedia articles on: Iron  - 1143 results

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IRON metallic chemical element; symbol Fe Lat. ferrum ; at. no. 26; at. wt. 55.845; m.p. about 1,535...Celsius; b.p. about 2,750 degrees Celsius; sp. gr. 7.87 at 20 degrees Celsius; valence +2, +3, +4, or +6. Iron is biologically significant. Because iron is a component of hemoglobin, a red oxygen-carrying pigment of the red blood cells of vertebrates, iron...
IRON AGE period in the development of industry that begins with the general use of iron and continues into modern times. In Asia, Egypt, and Europe...begin in the Americas until the coming of the Europeans. Iron beads were worn in Egypt as early as 4000 b.c., but these...
CAST-IRON ARCHITECTURE a term used to designate buildings that incorporate cast iron for structural and/or decorative purposes. After 1800 cast-iron supports were exploited as an alternative to masonry, and with the introduction of wrought-iron...
IRON GUARD Romanian nationalistic, anti-Semitic, and antiparliamentary...Nicolae Iorga , assassinated in 1940. Banned in 1933, the Iron Guard carried on as the All-for-the-Fatherland party. When...Marshall Ion Antonescu seized power with the help of the Iron Guard, but soon found himself in disagreement with it. He...
IRON GATE Rom. Portile de Fier, Serbian Gvozdena Vrata...flows through a gap between the Carpathian and Balkan mts. Iron Gate, formerly an obstacle to shipping, was cleared of rock...opened 1896) permits large river craft to get past the gorge. Iron Gate is the site of one of Europes largest hydroelectric...
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