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6 answers

Depending on the molar concentrations of reactants you shud produce ferrous hydroxide Fe(OH)2 as your principle product. Type FeSO4 + NaOH = Fe(OH)2 into google and u shud easily find your answer.

Just to add a point! your by product of the reaction is Sodium sulphate but this willl remain in liquid state (aqueous) and the ferrous hydroxide should precipitate out as a solid (i will hazard a guess that it either blue or green not too sure

2007-12-18 00:47:25 · answer #1 · answered by Crazy Taxi 2 · 0 3

Iron Sulfate And Sodium Hydroxide

2017-01-09 12:20:57 · answer #2 · answered by lumene 4 · 0 0

You obtain Iron hydroxide and sodium sulphate.
Fe2SO3 + NaOH = Fe(OH)2 + Na2SO3
As you can see, each Iron sulphate molecule needs 2 sodiul hydroxide molecules for reaction equilibrium.
That's the best I can do remembering the little chemistry I have left in my head :)

2007-12-18 00:45:16 · answer #3 · answered by vladontheweb 1 · 0 4

You might get some iron (s) and extra water (l). Or you could get sodium sulphate (l), iron (l) and oxygen (g). It's been a couple years since Chemistry. There's a specific diagram you can draw of each molecule with each atom's respective amount of electrons. Sorry I can't remember more.

2007-12-18 00:51:45 · answer #4 · answered by geezuskreyest 5 · 0 4

The balanced equation for this reaction is: FeSO4(aq) + 2 NaOH(aq) = Fe(OH)2(s) + Na2SO4(aq) A double replacement or metathesis reaction occurs, forming the insoluble Fe(OH)2 and the soluble Na2SO4

2016-05-24 21:26:26 · answer #5 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

**** happens

2015-02-24 00:52:28 · answer #6 · answered by ? 1 · 1 0

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