asked 132k views
4 votes
A large piece of iron was reacted with an acid. What would happen to the rate of the reaction had the large piece been finely divided into smaller pieces?

2 Answers

2 votes
The reaction occurs in a similar way as magnesium does, but much less vigorous. Strong heating is required to make iron powder burn in oxygen. The reaction gives out a yellow showery sparks and produces a black solid. iron reacts with dilute hydrocloric acid to give iron chloride and hydrogen gas.
answered
User Amorphous
by
8.4k points
2 votes

For a reaction to occur there must be effective collision between the reactant molecules. When the iron or the reactant particles are finely divided that increases the surface area exposing more reactant particles on the surface and increase the rate of intermoleculer collision. The greater effective collision between the reactant molecules the faster will the reaction occur.

answered
User Love Dager
by
8.6k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.