Rust- Mechanics Rust is the common name for a very common compound, iron oxide. Iron oxide, the chemical Fe 2 O 3 is common because iron combines very readily with oxygen. This open-air oxidization of iron is called rust; it is because of this pure iron is rarely seen in nature.
Iron or steel rusting is a common example of corrosion -- an electrochemical process involving an anode, an electrolyte and a cathode. When a piece of metal corrodes, the electrolyte helps provide oxygen to the anode. As oxygen combines with the iron of the anode, electrons are freed and the anode becomes rusted.
When they flow through the electrolyte and try to combine with any free ions For iron to rust, three things are needed: iron, water and oxygen. Here's what happens when the three get together: When a drop of water (with dissolved oxygen in it) hits an iron object, two things begin to happen almost immediately. First, the water, a good electrolyte, combines with carbon dioxide in the air to form a weak carbonic acid, an even better electrolyte.As the acid is formed and the iron dissolved, some of the water will begin to break down into its component pieces -- hydrogen and oxygen.
The free oxygen and dissolved iron bond into iron oxide, in the process freeing electrons. The electrons liberated from the anode portion of the iron flow to the cathode, which may be a piece of a metal less electrically reactive than iron, or another point on the piece of iron itself The chemical compounds found in liquids like acid rain, seawater and the salt-loaded spray from snow-belt roads make them better electrolytes than pure water, allowing their presence to speed the process of rusting on iron and other forms of corrosion on other metals Corrosion Iron and steel are ferrous metals that rust due to the slow oxidation by oxygen and water Plating with non ferrous metals or painting with a protective film prevent this. Also coating the iron with paint, oil or some other substance to seal it from the elements will prevent rusting You can also use sacrificial metals which are attached to the iron -- a large block of zinc or some other metal that will oxidize more easily than iron.
That way all the oxidation happens to the block of this other metal instead of to the iron and you just periodically replace the block.
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