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Corrosion of metalsCorrosion

Rusting can be prevented by keeping oxygen and water away, and by sacrificial protection. An alloy is a mixture of elements, including at least one metal. Different alloys have different properties.

Part of Chemistry (Single Science)Global challenges

Corrosion

can in air. They react with oxygen and form metal oxides. For example, sodium is a very metal.

When sodium is cut or scratched, its freshly exposed shiny surface rapidly turns dull as a thin layer of sodium oxide forms:

sodium + oxygen 鈫 sodium oxide

4Na(s) + O2(g) 鈫 2Na2O(s)

Other metals may oxidise more slowly. Gold and other very unreactive metals do not oxidise in air at all.

happens when a metal continues to oxidise. The metal becomes weaker over time, and eventually all of it may become metal oxide.

Rusting

is a specific example of corrosion, which occurs when iron or steel reacts with oxygen and water:

iron + oxygen + water 鈫 hydrated iron(III) oxide

Hydrated iron(III) oxide is the orange-brown substance seen on the surface of rusty objects.

A rusting experiment

The experiment in the diagram shows that both oxygen and water are needed for rusting to happen.

Three sealed test tubes, iron nail. 1st: nail half-submerged in water. Air. Nail rusty. 2nd: nail submerged in boiled water, layer of oil. No air. Nail shiny. 3rd: nail on silica gel. Nail shiny.
Figure caption,
Calcium chloride (in the right-hand test tube) absorbs water

The nail only rusts in the left-hand test tube. It does not rust:

  • in the middle test tube, where there was water but no oxygen
  • in the right-hand test tube, where there was oxygen but no water

Question

Explain whether iron is oxidised or when it forms rust.