Ferric oxide
General
| |
|---|---|
| Name | Iron (III) oxide |
| Chemical formula | Fe2O3 |
| Appearance | Red powder |
Physical
| |
| Formula weight | 159.7 amu |
| Melting point | 1838 K (1565 °C) |
| Density | 5.2 ×103 kg/m3 |
| Crystal structure | Corundum |
| Solubility | insoluble |
Thermochemistry
| |
| ΔfH0liquid | ? kJ/mol |
| ΔfH0solid | -824 kJ/mol |
| S0liquid, 1 bar | ? J/mol·K |
| S0solid | 87 J/mol·K |
Safety
| |
| Ingestion | Dangerous, iron poisoning may result. |
| Inhalation | Iron poisoning, pulmonary edema may result. |
| Skin | Contact with molten iron ore can cause iron poisoning. |
| Eyes | May cause irritation. |
| More info | Hazardous Chemical Database |
| SI units were used where possible. Unless otherwise stated, standard conditions were used. | |
It is often used in magnetic storage, for example in the magnetic layer of floppy disks. These consist of a thin sheet of mylar plastic, coated with ferric oxide. The particles can be magnetised
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to represent binary data. Magnetic Ink Character Recognition also uses ferric oxide compounds, suspended in an ink which can be read by special scanning hardware.
See also
- Iron oxides
- Iron (III) oxide
- Rust\n


