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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 → sodium oxide

4Na(s) + O2(g) → 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 → 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.