Ferrous: Difference between revisions

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'''Ferrous''' refers to the presence of iron in a bivalent iron compound (+2 oxidation state). It is derived from the Latin word 'ferrum' and is often used in the naming of different chemical compounds.
{{short description|Iron in its +2 oxidation state}}
{{For|ferrous metals and alloys|Ferrous metallurgy}}
{{Redirect|Reduced iron|the elemental powder|Direct reduced iron}}


==Chemical Properties==
[[File:Eisen(II)-chlorid-Tetrahydrat.jpg|thumb|Iron(II) chloride tetrahydrate, {{chem2|FeCl2*4H2O}}.]]
Ferrous compounds are usually magnetic and have a high melting point. They are also more reactive than ferric compounds. Ferrous ions can be oxidized to ferric ions.


==Uses==
In [[chemistry]], '''iron(II)''' refers to the [[chemical element|element]] [[iron]] in its +2 [[oxidation number|oxidation state]]. The adjective '''''ferrous''''' or the prefix '''''ferro-''''' is often used to specify such compounds, as in ''ferrous chloride'' for [[iron(II) chloride]] ({{chem2|FeCl2}}). The adjective ''[[ferric]]'' is used instead for [[iron(III)]] salts, containing the cation Fe<sup>3+</sup>. The word ''[[wikt:ferric|ferrous]]'' is derived from the [[Latin]] word {{wikt-lang|la|ferrum}}, meaning "iron".
Ferrous compounds have various uses in different fields. They are used in the manufacture of steel and other metal alloys. Ferrous sulfate is used as a dietary supplement to treat iron deficiency anemia. Ferrous fumarate, ferrous gluconate, and ferrous lactate are also used for this purpose.


==Health Effects==
In [[salt (chemistry)|ionic compounds]] (salts), such an atom may occur as a separate [[cation]] (positive ion) abbreviated as '''Fe<sup>2+</sup>''', although more precise descriptions include other ligands such as water and halides. Iron(II) centres occur in [[coordination complex]]es, such as in the [[anion]] [[ferrocyanide]], {{chem2|[Fe(CN)6](4-)}}, where six [[cyanide]] ligands are bound the metal centre; or, in [[organometallic compound]]s, such as the [[ferrocene]] {{chem2|[Fe(C2H5)2]}}, where two [[cyclopentadienyl]] anions are bound to the Fe<sup>II</sup> centre.
Excessive intake of ferrous compounds can lead to iron poisoning. Symptoms include stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, and in severe cases, organ failure or coma. On the other hand, iron deficiency can lead to anemia, a condition characterized by fatigue and weakness.


==See Also==
==Ferrous ions in biology==
* [[Iron]]
{{main article|Iron metabolism}}
* [[Iron deficiency anemia]]
All known forms of life require iron.<ref>{{cite web | title = Iron integral to the development of life on Earth – and the possibility of life on other planets | url = https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2021-12-07-iron-integral-development-life-earth-and-possibility-life-other-planets | date = 7 December 2021 | publisher = [[University of Oxford]] | accessdate = 9 May 2022}}</ref> Many [[protein]]s in living beings contain iron(II) centers. Examples of such [[metalloprotein]]s include [[hemoglobin]], [[ferredoxin]], and the [[cytochrome]]s. In many of these proteins, Fe(II) converts reversibly to Fe(III).<ref>{{cite book |author=Berg, Jeremy Mark |author2=Lippard, Stephen J. |title=Principles of bioinorganic chemistry |publisher=University Science Books |location=Sausalito, Calif |year=1994 |isbn=0-935702-73-3 }}</ref>
* [[Ferric]]
* [[Ferrous sulfate]]
* [[Ferrous fumarate]]
* [[Ferrous gluconate]]
* [[Ferrous lactate]]


[[Category:Chemistry]]
Insufficient iron in the human diet causes [[anemia]]. Animals and humans can obtain the necessary iron from foods that contain it in assimilable form, such as meat. Other organisms must obtain their iron from the environment. However, iron tends to form highly insoluble iron(III) oxides/hydroxides in aerobic ([[oxygen]]ated) environment, especially in [[calcareous soil]]s. [[Bacteria]] and [[graminaceae|grass]]es can thrive in such environments by secreting compounds called [[siderophore]]s that form soluble complexes with iron(III), that can be reabsorbed into the cell. (The other plants instead encourage the growth around their roots of certain bacteria that [[redox|reduce]] iron(III) to the more soluble iron(II).)<ref name=marsch94>H. Marschner and V. Römheld (1994): "Strategies of plants for acquisition of iron". ''Plant and Soil'', volume 165, issue 2, pages 261–274. {{doi|10.1007/BF00008069}}</ref>[[File:Pourbaix Diagram of Iron.svg|thumb|[[Pourbaix diagram]] of aqueous iron]]In contrast to iron(III) aquo complexes, iron(II) aquo complexes are soluble in water near neutral pH.{{citation needed|date=April 2024}} Ferrous iron is, however, oxidized by the oxygen in air, converting to iron(III).<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|last=Petsch|first=S.T.|title=Treatise on Geochemistry|edition=Second|year=2014|volume=10|series=Reference Module in Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences|pages=437-473|isbn=978-0-08-095975-7|chapter=10.11 - The Global Oxygen Cycle|doi=10.1016/B978-0-08-095975-7.00811-1|editor-last1=Holland|editor-first1=H.D.|editor-last2=Turekian|editor-first2=K.K.|publisher=Elsevier}}</ref>
[[Category:Metals]]
[[Category:Iron compounds]]


{{stub}}
==Ferrous salts and complexes==
Typically iron(II) salts, like the "[[iron(II) chloride|chloride]]" are [[aquo complex]]es with the formulas {{chem2|[Fe(H2O)6](2+)}}, as found in [[ferrous ammonium sulfate]].<ref name="earn">{{cite book |author=Earnshaw, A. |author2=Greenwood, N. N. |title=Chemistry of the elements |publisher=Butterworth-Heinemann |location=Oxford |year=1997 |isbn=0-7506-3365-4 |edition=2nd}}</ref>
 
The aquo ligands on iron(II) complexes are labile. It reacts with [[1,10-Phenanthroline|1,10-phenanthroline]] to give the blue iron(II) derivative:
 
When metallic iron (oxidation state 0) is placed in a solution of [[hydrochloric acid]], iron(II) chloride is formed, with release of [[hydrogen]] gas, by the reaction
: {{chem2|Fe^{0} + 2 H(+) -> Fe(2+) + H2}}
 
Iron(II) is oxidized by hydrogen peroxide to [[iron(III)]], forming a [[hydroxyl radical]] and a [[hydroxide ion]] in the process. This is the [[Fenton reaction]]. Iron(III) is then reduced back to iron(II) by another molecule of hydrogen peroxide, forming a [[hydroperoxyl]] radical and a [[hydrogen atom|proton]]. The net effect is a [[disproportionation]] of hydrogen peroxide to create two different oxygen-radical species, with water (H<sup>+</sup>&nbsp;+&nbsp;OH<sup>−</sup>) as a byproduct.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c00977 |title=Biomedicine Meets Fenton Chemistry |date=2021 |last1=Tang |first1=Zhongmin |last2=Zhao |first2=Peiran |last3=Wang |first3=Han |last4=Liu |first4=Yanyan |last5=Bu |first5=Wenbo |journal=Chemical Reviews |volume=121 |issue=4 |pages=1981–2019 |pmid=33492935 |s2cid=231712587 }}</ref>
 
{{NumBlk|:| Fe<sup>2+</sup> + H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> → Fe<sup>3+</sup> + HO<sup>•</sup> + OH<sup>−</sup>|{{EquationRef|1}}}}
{{NumBlk|:| Fe<sup>3+</sup> + H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> → Fe<sup>2+</sup> + HOO<sup>•</sup> + H<sup>+</sup>|{{EquationRef|2}}}}
 
The [[free radical]]s generated by this process engage in secondary reactions, which can degrade many organic and biochemical compounds.[[File:Fe(bipy)3 redox.svg|thumb|360px|center|Redox reaction of [Fe(bipyridine)<sub>3</sub>]<sup>2+</sup>.]]
==Ferrous minerals and other solids==
[[File:Iron(II) oxide.jpg|thumb|Iron(II) oxide (ferrous oxide), FeO, is a very complicated material that contains iron(II).]]
 
Iron(II) is found in many minerals and solids. Examples include the sulfide and oxide, FeS and FeO. These formulas are deceptively simple because these sulfides and oxides are often [[nonstoichiometric]]. For example, "ferrous sulfide" can refer to the 1:1 species (mineral name [[troilite]]) or a host of Fe-deficient derivatives ([[pyrrhotite]]). The mineral [[magnetite]] ("lode stone") is a mixed-valence compound with both Fe(II) and Fe(III), Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>.
 
==Bonding==
[[File:L.s. vs h.s. d6 octahedral.svg|thumb|d-orbital splitting scheme for low- and high spin octahedral Fe(II) complexes.]]Iron(II) is a d<sup>6</sup> center, meaning that the metal has six "valence" electrons in the 3d orbital shell. The number and type of ligands bound to iron(II) determine how these electrons arrange themselves. With the so-called "strong field ligands" such as [[cyanide]], the six electrons pair up. Thus [[ferrocyanide]] ({{chem2|[Fe(CN)6](4-)}} has no unpaired electrons, meaning it is a low-spin complex. With so-called "weak field ligands" such as [[water]], four of the six electrons are unpaired, meaning it is a [[High Spin Complex|high-spin]] complex. Thus [[aquo complex]] {{chem2|[Fe(H2O)6](2+)}} is [[paramagnetic]]. With [[chloride]], iron(II) forms tetrahedral complexes, e.g. {{chem2|[FeCl4](2-)}}. Tetrahedral complexes are high-spin complexes.
 
==Gallery==
{{Gallery
| title        = Selected Fe(II) compounds
| align        =
| footer      =
| style        =
| state        =
| height      =
| width        =
| captionstyle =
| File:Iron(II) nitrate hexahydrate.jpg
| alt2=
| [[Iron(II) nitrate|Ferrous nitrate hexahydrate]], Fe(NO<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>·6H<sub>2</sub>O
| File:Iron(II)-oxalate-sample.jpg
| alt3=
| [[Ferrous oxalate|Ferrous oxalate dihydrate]], [[Humboldtine]], FeC<sub>2</sub>O<sub>4</sub>·2H<sub>2</sub>O
| File:7314M-vivianite2.jpg
| alt4=
| [[Vivianite]], Ferrous phosphate octahydrate, Fe<sub>3</sub>(PO<sub>4</sub>)<sub>2</sub>·8H<sub>2</sub>O
| File:Ferrous_sulfate.jpg
| alt5=
| [[Iron(II) sulfate|Ferrous sulfate heptahydrate]], [[Melanterite]], FeSO<sub>4</sub>·7H<sub>2</sub>O
| File:Iron(II)-sulfide-sample.jpg
| alt6=
| [[Iron(II) sulfide|Ferrous sulfide]], [[Troilite]], FeS
| FeSiO3.png
| Ferrous silicate, [[Ferrosilite]], FeSiO<sub>3</sub>
}}
 
==See also==
* {{annotated link|Ferric}} — [Iron(III)] compounds
* {{annotated link|Ferromagnetism}}
* {{annotated link|Ferrous metal recycling}}
* {{annotated link|Iron(II) oxide}} (ferrous oxide)
* {{annotated link|Iron(II) bromide}} (ferrous bromide)
* {{annotated link|Steelmaking}}
 
==References==
 
{{wiktionary|ferrous|nonferrous}}
{{reflist|30em}}
 
[[Category:Iron]]
[[Category:Iron(II) compounds| ]]
[[Category:Chemical compounds by element]]

Revision as of 23:06, 11 January 2025

Iron in its +2 oxidation state


File:Eisen(II)-chlorid-Tetrahydrat.jpg
Iron(II) chloride tetrahydrate, FeCl2·4H2O .

In chemistry, iron(II) refers to the element iron in its +2 oxidation state. The adjective ferrous or the prefix ferro- is often used to specify such compounds, as in ferrous chloride for iron(II) chloride (FeCl2 ). The adjective ferric is used instead for iron(III) salts, containing the cation Fe3+. The word ferrous is derived from the Latin word



, meaning "iron".

In ionic compounds (salts), such an atom may occur as a separate cation (positive ion) abbreviated as Fe2+, although more precise descriptions include other ligands such as water and halides. Iron(II) centres occur in coordination complexes, such as in the anion ferrocyanide, [Fe(CN)6]4− , where six cyanide ligands are bound the metal centre; or, in organometallic compounds, such as the ferrocene [Fe(C2H5)2] , where two cyclopentadienyl anions are bound to the FeII centre.

Ferrous ions in biology

All known forms of life require iron.<ref>

Iron integral to the development of life on Earth – and the possibility of life on other planets(link). {{{website}}}. University of Oxford. 7 December 2021.



</ref> Many proteins in living beings contain iron(II) centers. Examples of such metalloproteins include hemoglobin, ferredoxin, and the cytochromes. In many of these proteins, Fe(II) converts reversibly to Fe(III).<ref>{{{last}}},

 Berg, Jeremy Mark, 
  
 Principles of bioinorganic chemistry, 
  
 Sausalito, Calif:University Science Books, 
 1994, 
  
  
 ISBN 0-935702-73-3,</ref>

Insufficient iron in the human diet causes anemia. Animals and humans can obtain the necessary iron from foods that contain it in assimilable form, such as meat. Other organisms must obtain their iron from the environment. However, iron tends to form highly insoluble iron(III) oxides/hydroxides in aerobic (oxygenated) environment, especially in calcareous soils. Bacteria and grasses can thrive in such environments by secreting compounds called siderophores that form soluble complexes with iron(III), that can be reabsorbed into the cell. (The other plants instead encourage the growth around their roots of certain bacteria that reduce iron(III) to the more soluble iron(II).)<ref name=marsch94>H. Marschner and V. Römheld (1994): "Strategies of plants for acquisition of iron". Plant and Soil, volume 165, issue 2, pages 261–274. doi:10.1007/BF00008069

</ref>

File:Pourbaix Diagram of Iron.svg
Pourbaix diagram of aqueous iron

In contrast to iron(III) aquo complexes, iron(II) aquo complexes are soluble in water near neutral pH.

citation needed (April 2024)

Ferrous iron is, however, oxidized by the oxygen in air, converting to iron(III).<ref>

</ref>

Ferrous salts and complexes

Typically iron(II) salts, like the "chloride" are aquo complexes with the formulas [Fe(H2O)6]2+ , as found in ferrous ammonium sulfate.<ref name="earn">{{{last}}},

 Earnshaw, A., 
  
 Chemistry of the elements, 
 2nd edition, 
 Oxford:Butterworth-Heinemann, 
 1997, 
  
  
 ISBN 0-7506-3365-4,</ref> 

The aquo ligands on iron(II) complexes are labile. It reacts with 1,10-phenanthroline to give the blue iron(II) derivative:

When metallic iron (oxidation state 0) is placed in a solution of hydrochloric acid, iron(II) chloride is formed, with release of hydrogen gas, by the reaction

Fe0 + 2 H+ → Fe2+ + H2


Iron(II) is oxidized by hydrogen peroxide to iron(III), forming a hydroxyl radical and a hydroxide ion in the process. This is the Fenton reaction. Iron(III) is then reduced back to iron(II) by another molecule of hydrogen peroxide, forming a hydroperoxyl radical and a proton. The net effect is a disproportionation of hydrogen peroxide to create two different oxygen-radical species, with water (H+ + OH) as a byproduct.<ref>,

 Biomedicine Meets Fenton Chemistry, 
 Chemical Reviews, 
 
 Vol. 121(Issue: 4),
 pp. 1981–2019,
 DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c00977,
 PMID: 33492935,</ref> 

Template:NumBlk Template:NumBlk

The free radicals generated by this process engage in secondary reactions, which can degrade many organic and biochemical compounds.

File:Fe(bipy)3 redox.svg
Redox reaction of [Fe(bipyridine)3]2+.

Ferrous minerals and other solids

File:Iron(II) oxide.jpg
Iron(II) oxide (ferrous oxide), FeO, is a very complicated material that contains iron(II).

Iron(II) is found in many minerals and solids. Examples include the sulfide and oxide, FeS and FeO. These formulas are deceptively simple because these sulfides and oxides are often nonstoichiometric. For example, "ferrous sulfide" can refer to the 1:1 species (mineral name troilite) or a host of Fe-deficient derivatives (pyrrhotite). The mineral magnetite ("lode stone") is a mixed-valence compound with both Fe(II) and Fe(III), Fe3O4.

Bonding

File:L.s. vs h.s. d6 octahedral.svg
d-orbital splitting scheme for low- and high spin octahedral Fe(II) complexes.

Iron(II) is a d6 center, meaning that the metal has six "valence" electrons in the 3d orbital shell. The number and type of ligands bound to iron(II) determine how these electrons arrange themselves. With the so-called "strong field ligands" such as cyanide, the six electrons pair up. Thus ferrocyanide ([Fe(CN)6]4−

has no unpaired electrons, meaning it is a low-spin complex. With so-called "weak field ligands" such as water, four of the six electrons are unpaired, meaning it is a high-spin complex. Thus aquo complex [Fe(H2O)6]2+
is paramagnetic. With chloride, iron(II) forms tetrahedral complexes, e.g. [FeCl4]2−

. Tetrahedral complexes are high-spin complexes.

Gallery

Template:Gallery

See also

— [Iron(III)] compounds
(ferrous oxide)
(ferrous bromide)


References

<references group="" responsive="0"></references>