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Re: Reply: [ihc] Rust intervention



On Jul 22, 2004, at 11:52 AM, John M. Adams wrote:


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-ihc@domain.elided [mailto:owner-ihc@domain.elided]On Behalf Of
John Hofstetter
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2004 11:16 AM
To: Ted Borck
Cc: ihc-digest Digest
Subject: Re: Reply: [ihc] Rust intervention


I've been pondering the magnetite, but I don't remember enough organic
chemistry to know what I'm talking about. Another site that sells the
latex product calls the coating a ferro-organic which I can more easily
accept.

Anyone wanting to pick on me could point out that magnetite is Ferrous
Oxide and that is not an organic compound, so why do I need some
organic chemistry knowledge. Because I want to know how the latex
makes the Ferric Oxide into Ferrous Oxide.

John

John Hofstetter
Ol' Saline
www.goldrush.com/~hofs

I've been following this thread (or trying to - I don't have a chemistry
background), and I've ended up confused.

I have always used naval jelly (phosphoric acid) to deal with rust. My
understanding was that it converted ferrous oxide to ferric oxide. Do I have
this backwards? Or, John, is your last sentence reversed? Also, I found this
on the web, adding to my befuddlement:

a) FeO = ferrous oxide

b) Fe2O3 = ferric oxide, hematite, and red iron oxide

c) Fe3O4 = ferrous ferric oxide, magnetite, and black iron oxide

So magnetite is a combination of the two? Is that what the blackening is
from naval jelly?

Thanks for any help... ~John A.
Yes, careless mistake. Hopefully, momentary butter slipping off of my noodles.

I meant Ferrous ferric oxide which is magnetite. The Ferrous ferric oxide is something like Fe+++2Fe++O4 which is quite different than FeO.

Sorry, and thanks for catching it.

John Hofstetter
Ol' Saline
www.goldrush.com/~hofs



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