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Iron

Iron (/ˈən/ or /ˈərn/) is a chemical element with symbol Fe (from Latin: ferrum) and atomic number 26. It is a metal that belongs to the first transition series and group 8 of the periodic table. It is, by mass, the most common element on Earth, just ahead of oxygen (32.1% and 30.1%, respectively), forming much of Earth's outer and inner core. It is the fourth most common element in the Earth's crust, being mainly deposited by meteorites in its metallic state, with its ores also being found there.

Iron, 26Fe
Iron
Allotropessee Allotropes of iron
Appearancelustrous metallic with a grayish tinge
Standard atomic weight Ar°(Fe)
  • 55.845±0.002
  • 55.845±0.002 (abridged)[1]
Iron in the periodic table
Hydrogen Helium
Lithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine Neon
Sodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine Argon
Potassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine Krypton
Rubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine Xenon
Caesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury (element) Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine Radon
Francium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson


Fe

Ru
manganeseironcobalt
Atomic number (Z)26
Groupgroup 8
Periodperiod 4
Block  d-block
Electron configuration[Ar] 3d6 4s2
Electrons per shell2, 8, 14, 2
Physical properties
Phase at STPsolid
Melting point1811 K ​(1538 °C, ​2800 °F)
Boiling point3134 K ​(2862 °C, ​5182 °F)
Density (near r.t.)7.874 g/cm3
when liquid (at m.p.)6.98 g/cm3
Heat of fusion13.81 kJ/mol
Heat of vaporization340 kJ/mol
Molar heat capacity25.10 J/(mol·K)
Vapor pressure
P (Pa) 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 k
at T (K) 1728 1890 2091 2346 2679 3132
Atomic properties
Oxidation states−4, −2, −1, 0, +1,[2] +2, +3, +4, +5,[3] +6, +7[4] (an amphoteric oxide)
ElectronegativityPauling scale: 1.83
Ionization energies
  • 1st: 762.5 kJ/mol
  • 2nd: 1561.9 kJ/mol
  • 3rd: 2957 kJ/mol
  • (more)
Atomic radiusempirical: 126 pm
Covalent radiusLow spin: 132±3 pm
High spin: 152±6 pm
Van der Waals radius194 [1] pm
Spectral lines of iron
Other properties
Natural occurrenceprimordial
Crystal structurebody-centered cubic (bcc)

a=286.65 pm
Crystal structureface-centered cubic (fcc)

between 1185–1667 K; a=364.680 pm
Speed of sound thin rod5120 m/s (at r.t.) (electrolytic)
Thermal expansion11.8 µm/(m⋅K) (at 25 °C)
Thermal conductivity80.4 W/(m⋅K)
Electrical resistivity96.1 nΩ⋅m (at 20 °C)
Curie point1043 K
Magnetic orderingferromagnetic
Young's modulus211 GPa
Shear modulus82 GPa
Bulk modulus170 GPa
Poisson ratio0.29
Mohs hardness4
Vickers hardness608 MPa
Brinell hardness200–1180 MPa
CAS Number7439-89-6
History
Discoverybefore 5000 BC
Symbol"Fe": from Latin ferrum
Main isotopes of iron
Iso­tope Decay
abun­dance half-life (t1/2) mode pro­duct
54Fe 5.85% stable
55Fe syn 2.73 y ε 55Mn
56Fe 91.75% stable
57Fe 2.12% stable
58Fe 0.28% stable
59Fe syn 44.6 d β 59Co
60Fe trace 2.6×106 y β 60Co
 Category: Iron
| references

Extracting usable metal from iron ores requires kilns or furnaces capable of reaching 1,500 °C (2,730 °F) or higher, about 500 °C (932 °F) higher than that required to smelt copper. Humans started to master that process in Eurasia during the 2nd millennium BCE and the use of iron tools and weapons began to displace copper alloys—in some regions, only around 1200 BCE. That event is considered the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age. In the modern world, iron alloys, such as steel, stainless steel, cast iron and special steels, are by far the most common industrial metals, due to their mechanical properties and low cost. The iron and steel industry is thus very important economically, and iron is the cheapest metal, with a price of a few dollars per kilogram or pound.

Pristine and smooth pure iron surfaces are a mirror-like silvery-gray. Iron reacts readily with oxygen and water to produce brown-to-black hydrated iron oxides, commonly known as rust. Unlike the oxides of some other metals that form passivating layers, rust occupies more volume than the metal and thus flakes off, exposing more fresh surfaces for corrosion. High-purity irons (e.g. electrolytic iron) are more resistant to corrosion.

The body of an adult human contains about 4 grams (0.005% body weight) of iron, mostly in hemoglobin and myoglobin. These two proteins play essential roles in vertebrate metabolism, respectively oxygen transport by blood and oxygen storage in muscles. To maintain the necessary levels, human iron metabolism requires a minimum of iron in the diet. Iron is also the metal at the active site of many important redox enzymes dealing with cellular respiration and oxidation and reduction in plants and animals.[5]

Chemically, the most common oxidation states of iron are iron(II) and iron(III). Iron shares many properties of other transition metals, including the other group 8 elements, ruthenium and osmium. Iron forms compounds in a wide range of oxidation states, −2 to +7. Iron also forms many coordination compounds; some of them, such as ferrocene, ferrioxalate, and Prussian blue have substantial industrial, medical, or research applications.

Characteristics

Allotropes

 
Molar volume vs. pressure for α iron at room temperature

At least four allotropes of iron (differing atom arrangements in the solid) are known, conventionally denoted α, γ, δ, and ε.

 
Low-pressure phase diagram of pure iron

The first three forms are observed at ordinary pressures. As molten iron cools past its freezing point of 1538 °C, it crystallizes into its δ allotrope, which has a body-centered cubic (bcc) crystal structure. As it cools further to 1394 °C, it changes to its γ-iron allotrope, a face-centered cubic (fcc) crystal structure, or austenite. At 912 °C and below, the crystal structure again becomes the bcc α-iron allotrope.[6]

The physical properties of iron at very high pressures and temperatures have also been studied extensively,[7][8] because of their relevance to theories about the cores of the Earth and other planets. Above approximately 10 GPa and temperatures of a few hundred kelvin or less, α-iron changes into another hexagonal close-packed (hcp) structure, which is also known as ε-iron. The higher-temperature γ-phase also changes into ε-iron, but does so at higher pressure.

Some controversial experimental evidence exists for a stable β phase at pressures above 50 GPa and temperatures of at least 1500 K. It is supposed to have an orthorhombic or a double hcp structure.[9] (Confusingly, the term "β-iron" is sometimes also used to refer to α-iron above its Curie point, when it changes from being ferromagnetic to paramagnetic, even though its crystal structure has not changed.[6])

The inner core of the Earth is generally presumed to consist of an iron-nickel alloy with ε (or β) structure.[10]

Melting and boiling points

The melting and boiling points of iron, along with its enthalpy of atomization, are lower than those of the earlier 3d elements from scandium to chromium, showing the lessened contribution of the 3d electrons to metallic bonding as they are attracted more and more into the inert core by the nucleus;[11] however, they are higher than the values for the previous element manganese because that element has a half-filled 3d sub-shell and consequently its d-electrons are not easily delocalized. This same trend appears for ruthenium but not osmium.[12]

The melting point of iron is experimentally well defined for pressures less than 50 GPa. For greater pressures, published data (as of 2007) still varies by tens of gigapascals and over a thousand kelvin.[13]

Magnetic properties

 
Magnetization curves of 9 ferromagnetic materials, showing saturation. 1. Sheet steel, 2. Silicon steel, 3. Cast steel, 4. Tungsten steel, 5. Magnet steel, 6. Cast iron, 7. Nickel, 8. Cobalt, 9. Magnetite[14]

Below its Curie point of 770 °C (1,420 °F; 1,040 K), α-iron changes from paramagnetic to ferromagnetic: the spins of the two unpaired electrons in each atom generally align with the spins of its neighbors, creating an overall magnetic field.[15] This happens because the orbitals of those two electrons (dz2 and dx2 −. y2) do not point toward neighboring atoms in the lattice, and therefore are not involved in metallic bonding.[6]

In the absence of an external source of magnetic field, the atoms get spontaneously partitioned into magnetic domains, about 10 micrometers across,[16] such that the atoms in each domain have parallel spins, but some domains have other orientations. Thus a macroscopic piece of iron will have a nearly zero overall magnetic field.

Application of an external magnetic field causes the domains that are magnetized in the same general direction to grow at the expense of adjacent ones that point in other directions, reinforcing the external field. This effect is exploited in devices that need to channel magnetic fields to fulfill design function, such as electrical transformers, magnetic recording heads, and electric motors. Impurities, lattice defects, or grain and particle boundaries can "pin" the domains in the new positions, so that the effect persists even after the external field is removed – thus turning the iron object into a (permanent) magnet.[15]

Similar behavior is exhibited by some iron compounds, such as the ferrites including the mineral magnetite, a crystalline form of the mixed iron(II,III) oxide Fe3O4 (although the atomic-scale mechanism, ferrimagnetism, is somewhat different). Pieces of magnetite with natural permanent magnetization (lodestones) provided the earliest compasses for navigation. Particles of magnetite were extensively used in magnetic recording media such as core memories, magnetic tapes, floppies, and disks, until they were replaced by cobalt-based materials.

Isotopes

Iron has four stable isotopes: 54Fe (5.845% of natural iron), 56Fe (91.754%), 57Fe (2.119%) and 58Fe (0.282%). 24 artificial isotopes have also been created. Of these stable isotopes, only 57Fe has a nuclear spin (−12). The nuclide 54Fe theoretically can undergo double electron capture to 54Cr, but the process has never been observed and only a lower limit on the half-life of 3.1×1022 years has been established.[17]

60Fe is an extinct radionuclide of long half-life (2.6 million years).[18] It is not found on Earth, but its ultimate decay product is its granddaughter, the stable nuclide 60Ni.[17] Much of the past work on isotopic composition of iron has focused on the nucleosynthesis of 60Fe through studies of meteorites and ore formation. In the last decade, advances in mass spectrometry have allowed the detection and quantification of minute, naturally occurring variations in the ratios of the stable isotopes of iron. Much of this work is driven by the Earth and planetary science communities, although applications to biological and industrial systems are emerging.[19]

In phases of the meteorites Semarkona and Chervony Kut, a correlation between the concentration of 60Ni, the granddaughter of 60Fe, and the abundance of the stable iron isotopes provided evidence for the existence of 60Fe at the time of formation of the Solar System. Possibly the energy released by the decay of 60Fe, along with that released by 26Al, contributed to the remelting and differentiation of asteroids after their formation 4.6 billion years ago. The abundance of 60Ni present in extraterrestrial material may bring further insight into the origin and early history of the Solar System.[20]

The most abundant iron isotope 56Fe is of particular interest to nuclear scientists because it represents the most common endpoint of nucleosynthesis.[21] Since 56Ni (14 alpha particles) is easily produced from lighter nuclei in the alpha process in nuclear reactions in supernovae (see silicon burning process), it is the endpoint of fusion chains inside extremely massive stars, since addition of another alpha particle, resulting in 60Zn, requires a great deal more energy. This 56Ni, which has a half-life of about 6 days, is created in quantity in these stars, but soon decays by two successive positron emissions within supernova decay products in the supernova remnant gas cloud, first to radioactive 56Co, and then to stable 56Fe. As such, iron is the most abundant element in the core of red giants, and is the most abundant metal in iron meteorites and in the dense metal cores of planets such as Earth.[22] It is also very common in the universe, relative to other stable metals of approximately the same atomic weight.[22][23] Iron is the sixth most abundant element in the universe, and the most common refractory element.[24]

Although a further tiny energy gain could be extracted by synthesizing 62Ni, which has a marginally higher binding energy than 56Fe, conditions in stars are unsuitable for this process. Element production in supernovas greatly favor iron over nickel, and in any case, 56Fe still has a lower mass per nucleon than 62Ni due to its higher fraction of lighter protons.[25] Hence, elements heavier than iron require a supernova for their formation, involving rapid neutron capture by starting 56Fe nuclei.[22]

In the far future of the universe, assuming that proton decay does not occur, cold fusion occurring via quantum tunnelling would cause the light nuclei in ordinary matter to fuse into 56Fe nuclei. Fission and alpha-particle emission would then make heavy nuclei decay into iron, converting all stellar-mass objects to cold spheres of pure iron.[26]

Origin and occurrence in nature

Cosmogenesis

Iron's abundance in rocky planets like Earth is due to its abundant production during the runaway fusion and explosion of type Ia supernovae, which scatters the iron into space.[27][28]

Metallic iron

 
A polished and chemically etched piece of an iron meteorite, believed to be similar in composition to the Earth's metallic core, showing individual crystals of the iron-nickel alloy (Widmanstatten pattern)

Metallic or native iron is rarely found on the surface of the Earth because it tends to oxidize. However, both the Earth's inner and outer core, that account for 35% of the mass of the whole Earth, are believed to consist largely of an iron alloy, possibly with nickel. Electric currents in the liquid outer core are believed to be the origin of the Earth's magnetic field. The other terrestrial planets (Mercury, Venus, and Mars) as well as the Moon are believed to have a metallic core consisting mostly of iron. The M-type asteroids are also believed to be partly or mostly made of metallic iron alloy.

The rare iron meteorites are the main form of natural metallic iron on the Earth's surface. Items made of cold-worked meteoritic iron have been found in various archaeological sites dating from a time when iron smelting had not yet been developed; and the Inuit in Greenland have been reported to use iron from the Cape York meteorite for tools and hunting weapons.[29] About 1 in 20 meteorites consist of the unique iron-nickel minerals taenite (35–80% iron) and kamacite (90–95% iron).[30] Native iron is also rarely found in basalts that have formed from magmas that have come into contact with carbon-rich sedimentary rocks, which have reduced the oxygen fugacity sufficiently for iron to crystallize. This is known as Telluric iron and is described from a few localities, such as Disko Island in West Greenland, Yakutia in Russia and Bühl in Germany.[31]

Mantle minerals

Ferropericlase (Mg,Fe)O, a solid solution of periclase (MgO) and wüstite (FeO), makes up about 20% of the volume of the lower mantle of the Earth, which makes it the second most abundant mineral phase in that region after silicate perovskite (Mg,Fe)SiO3; it also is the major host for iron in the lower mantle.[32] At the bottom of the transition zone of the mantle, the reaction γ-(Mg,Fe)2[SiO4] ↔ (Mg,Fe)[SiO3] + (Mg,Fe)O transforms γ-olivine into a mixture of silicate perovskite and ferropericlase and vice versa. In the literature, this mineral phase of the lower mantle is also often called magnesiowüstite.[33] Silicate perovskite may form up to 93% of the lower mantle,[34] and the magnesium iron form, (Mg,Fe)SiO3, is considered to be the most abundant mineral in the Earth, making up 38% of its volume.[35]

Earth's crust

 
Ochre path in Roussillon.

While iron is the most abundant element on Earth, most of this iron is concentrated in the inner and outer cores.[36][37] The fraction of iron that is in Earth's crust only amounts to about 5% of the overall mass of the crust and is thus only the fourth most abundant element in that layer (after oxygen, silicon, and aluminium).[38]

Most of the iron in the crust is combined with various other elements to form many iron minerals. An important class is the iron oxide minerals such as hematite (Fe2O3), magnetite (Fe3O4), and siderite (FeCO3), which are the major ores of iron. Many igneous rocks also contain the sulfide minerals pyrrhotite and pentlandite.[39][40] During weathering, iron tends to leach from sulfide deposits as the sulfate and from silicate deposits as the bicarbonate. Both of these are oxidized in aqueous solution and precipitate in even mildly elevated pH as iron(III) oxide.[41]

 
Banded iron formation in McKinley Park, Minnesota.

Large deposits of iron are banded iron formations, a type of rock consisting of repeated thin layers of iron oxides alternating with bands of iron-poor shale and chert. The banded iron formations were laid down in the time between 3,700 million years ago and 1,800 million years ago.[42][43]

Materials containing finely ground iron(III) oxides or oxide-hydroxides, such as ochre, have been used as yellow, red, and brown pigments since pre-historical times. They contribute as well to the color of various rocks and clays, including entire geological formations like the Painted Hills in Oregon and the Buntsandstein ("colored sandstone", British Bunter).[44] Through Eisensandstein (a jurassic 'iron sandstone', e.g. from Donzdorf in Germany)[45] and Bath stone in the UK, iron compounds are responsible for the yellowish color of many historical buildings and sculptures.[46] The proverbial red color of the surface of Mars is derived from an iron oxide-rich regolith.[47]

Significant amounts of iron occur in the iron sulfide mineral pyrite (FeS2), but it is difficult to extract iron from it and it is therefore not exploited.[48] In fact, iron is so common that production generally focuses only on ores with very high quantities of it.[49]

According to the International Resource Panel's Metal Stocks in Society report, the global stock of iron in use in society is 2,200 kg per capita. More-developed countries differ in this respect from less-developed countries (7,000–14,000 vs 2,000 kg per capita).[50]

Oceans

Ocean science demonstrated the role of the iron in the ancient seas in both marine biota and climate.[51]

Chemistry and compounds

Oxidation
state
Representative compound
−2 (d10) Disodium tetracarbonylferrate (Collman's reagent)
−1 (d9) Fe
2
(CO)2−
8
0 (d8) Iron pentacarbonyl
1 (d7) Cyclopentadienyliron dicarbonyl dimer ("Fp2")
2 (d6) Ferrous sulfate, ferrocene
3 (d5) Ferric chloride, ferrocenium tetrafluoroborate
4 (d4) Fe(diars)
2
Cl2+
2
, Ferryl tetrafluoroborate
5 (d3) FeO3−
4
6 (d2) Potassium ferrate
7 (d1) [FeO4] (matrix isolation, 4K)

Iron shows the characteristic chemical properties of the transition metals, namely the ability to form variable oxidation states differing by steps of one and a very large coordination and organometallic chemistry: indeed, it was the discovery of an iron compound, ferrocene, that revolutionalized the latter field in the 1950s.[52] Iron is sometimes considered as a prototype for the entire block of transition metals, due to its abundance and the immense role it has played in the technological progress of humanity.[53] Its 26 electrons are arranged in the configuration [Ar]3d64s2, of which the 3d and 4s electrons are relatively close in energy, and thus a number of electrons can be ionized.[12]

Iron forms compounds mainly in the oxidation states +2 (iron(II), "ferrous") and +3 (iron(III), "ferric"). Iron also occurs in higher oxidation states, e.g., the purple potassium ferrate (K2FeO4), which contains iron in its +6 oxidation state. The anion [FeO4] with iron in its +7 oxidation state, along with an iron(V)-peroxo isomer, has been detected by infrared spectroscopy at 4 K after cocondensation of laser-ablated Fe atoms with a mixture of O2/Ar.[54] Iron(IV) is a common intermediate in many biochemical oxidation reactions.[55][56] Numerous organoiron compounds contain formal oxidation states of +1, 0, −1, or even −2. The oxidation states and other bonding properties are often assessed using the technique of Mössbauer spectroscopy.[57] Many mixed valence compounds contain both iron(II) and iron(III) centers, such as magnetite and Prussian blue (Fe4(Fe[CN]6)3).[56] The latter is used as the traditional "blue" in blueprints.[58]

Iron is the first of the transition metals that cannot reach its group oxidation state of +8, although its heavier congeners ruthenium and osmium can, with ruthenium having more difficulty than osmium.[6] Ruthenium exhibits an aqueous cationic chemistry in its low oxidation states similar to that of iron, but osmium does not, favoring high oxidation states in which it forms anionic complexes.[6] In the second half of the 3d transition series, vertical similarities down the groups compete with the horizontal similarities of iron with its neighbors cobalt and nickel in the periodic table, which are also ferromagnetic at room temperature and share similar chemistry. As such, iron, cobalt, and nickel are sometimes grouped together as the iron triad.[53]

Unlike many other metals, iron does not form amalgams with mercury. As a result, mercury is traded in standardized 76 pound flasks (34 kg) made of iron.[59]

Iron is by far the most reactive element in its group; it is pyrophoric when finely divided and dissolves easily in dilute acids, giving Fe2+. However, it does not react with concentrated nitric acid and other oxidizing acids due to the formation of an impervious oxide layer, which can nevertheless react with hydrochloric acid.[6] High-purity iron, called electrolytic iron, is considered to be resistant to rust, due to its oxide layer.

Binary compounds

Oxides and sulfides

 
Ferrous or iron(II) oxide, FeO
 
Ferric or iron(III) oxide Fe2O3
 
Ferrosoferric or iron(II,III) oxide Fe3O4

Iron forms various oxide and hydroxide compounds; the most common are iron(II,III) oxide (Fe3O4), and iron(III) oxide (Fe2O3). Iron(II) oxide also exists, though it is unstable at room temperature. Despite their names, they are actually all non-stoichiometric compounds whose compositions may vary.[60] These oxides are the principal ores for the production of iron (see bloomery and blast furnace). They are also used in the production of ferrites, useful magnetic storage media in computers, and pigments. The best known sulfide is iron pyrite (FeS2), also known as fool's gold owing to its golden luster.[56] It is not an iron(IV) compound, but is actually an iron(II) polysulfide containing Fe2+ and S2−
2
ions in a distorted sodium chloride structure.[60]

 

Halides

 
Hydrated iron(III) chloride (ferric chloride)

The binary ferrous and ferric halides are well-known. The ferrous halides typically arise from treating iron metal with the corresponding hydrohalic acid to give the corresponding hydrated salts.[56]

Fe + 2 HX → FeX2 + H2 (X = F, Cl, Br, I)

Iron reacts with fluorine, chlorine, and bromine to give the corresponding ferric halides, ferric chloride being the most common.[61]

2 Fe + 3 X2 → 2 FeX3 (X = F, Cl, Br)

Ferric iodide is an exception, being thermodynamically unstable due to the oxidizing power of Fe3+ and the high reducing power of I:[61]

2 I + 2 Fe3+ → I2 + 2 Fe2+ (E0 = +0.23 V)

Ferric iodide, a black solid, is not stable in ordinary conditions, but can be prepared through the reaction of iron pentacarbonyl with iodine and carbon monoxide in the presence of hexane and light at the temperature of −20 °C, with oxygen and water excluded.[61]Complexes of ferric iodide with some soft bases are known to be stable compounds.[62][63]

Solution chemistry

 
Comparison of colors of solutions of ferrate (left) and permanganate (right)

The standard reduction potentials in acidic aqueous solution for some common iron ions are given below:[6]

[Fe(H2O)6]2+ + 2 e ⇌ Fe E0 = −0.447 V
[Fe(H2O)6]3+ + e ⇌ [Fe(H2O)6]2+ E0 = +0.77 V
FeO2−
4
+ 8 H3O+ + 3 e
⇌ [Fe(H2O)6]3+ + 6 H2O E0 = +2.20 V

The red-purple tetrahedral ferrate(VI) anion is such a strong oxidizing agent that it oxidizes ammonia to nitrogen (N2) and water to oxygen[61]

4 FeO2−
4
+ 34 H
2
O
→ 4 [Fe(H2O)6]3+ + 20 OH
+ 3 O2

The pale-violet hexaquo complex [Fe(H2O)6]3+ is an acid such that above pH 0 it is fully hydrolyzed:[64]

[Fe(H2O)6]3+ [Fe(H2O)5(OH)]2+ + H+ K = 10−3.05 mol dm−3
[Fe(H2O)5(OH)]2+ [Fe(H2O)4(OH)2]+ + H+ K = 10−3.26 mol dm−3
2[Fe(H2O)6]3+ [Fe(H2O)4(OH)]4+2 + 2H+ + 2H2O K = 10−2.91 mol dm−3
 
Blue-green iron(II) sulfate heptahydrate

As pH rises above 0 the above yellow hydrolyzed species form and as it rises above 2–3, reddish-brown hydrous iron(III) oxide precipitates out of solution. Although Fe3+ has a d5 configuration, its absorption spectrum is not like that of Mn2+ with its weak, spin-forbidden d–d bands, because Fe3+ has higher positive charge and is more polarizing, lowering the energy of its ligand-to-metal charge transfer absorptions. Thus, all the above complexes are rather strongly colored, with the single exception of the hexaquo ion – and even that has a spectrum dominated by charge transfer in the near ultraviolet region.[64] On the other hand, the pale green iron(II) hexaquo ion [Fe(H2O)6]2+ does not undergo appreciable hydrolysis. Carbon dioxide is not evolved when carbonate anions are added, which instead results in white iron(II) carbonate being precipitated out. In excess carbon dioxide this forms the slightly soluble bicarbonate, which occurs commonly in groundwater, but it oxidises quickly in air to form iron(III) oxide that accounts for the brown deposits present in a sizeable number of streams.[65]

Coordination compounds

Due to its electronic structure, iron has a very large coordination and organometallic chemistry.

 
The two enantiomorphs of the ferrioxalate ion

Many coordination compounds of iron are known. A typical six-coordinate anion is hexachloroferrate(III), [FeCl6]3−, found in the mixed salt tetrakis(methylammonium) hexachloroferrate(III) chloride.[66][67] Complexes with multiple bidentate ligands have geometric isomers. For example, the trans-chlorohydridobis(bis-1,2-(diphenylphosphino)ethane)iron(II) complex is used as a starting material for compounds with the Fe(dppe)2 moiety.[68][69] The ferrioxalate ion with three oxalate ligands (shown at right) displays helical chirality with its two non-superposable geometries labelled Λ (lambda) for the left-handed screw axis and Δ (delta) for the right-handed screw axis, in line with IUPAC conventions.[64] Potassium ferrioxalate is used in chemical actinometry and along with its sodium salt undergoes photoreduction applied in old-style photographic processes. The dihydrate of iron(II) oxalate has a polymeric structure with co-planar oxalate ions bridging between iron centres with the water of crystallisation located forming the caps of each octahedron, as illustrated below.[70]

 
Crystal structure of iron(II) oxalate dihydrate, showing iron (gray), oxygen (red), carbon (black), and hydrogen (white) atoms.
 
Blood-red positive thiocyanate test for iron(III)

Iron(III) complexes are quite similar to those of chromium(III) with the exception of iron(III)'s preference for O-donor instead of N-donor ligands. The latter tend to be rather more unstable than iron(II) complexes and often dissociate in water. Many Fe–O complexes show intense colors and are used as tests for phenols or enols. For example, in the ferric chloride test, used to determine the presence of phenols, iron(III) chloride reacts with a phenol to form a deep violet complex:[64]

3 ArOH + FeCl3 → Fe(OAr)3 + 3 HCl (Ar = aryl)

Among the halide and pseudohalide complexes, fluoro complexes of iron(III) are the most stable, with the colorless [FeF5(H2O)]2− being the most stable in aqueous solution. Chloro complexes are less stable and favor tetrahedral coordination as in [FeCl4]; [FeBr4] and [FeI4] are reduced easily to iron(II). Thiocyanate is a common test for the presence of iron(III) as it forms the blood-red [Fe(SCN)(H2O)5]2+. Like manganese(II), most iron(III) complexes are high-spin, the exceptions being those with ligands that are high in the spectrochemical series such as cyanide. An example of a low-spin iron(III) complex is [Fe(CN)6]3−. Iron shows a great variety of electronic spin states, including every possible spin quantum number value for a d-block element from 0 (diamagnetic) to 52 (5 unpaired electrons). This value is always half the number of unpaired electrons. Complexes with zero to two unpaired electrons are considered low-spin and those with four or five are considered high-spin.[60]

Iron(II) complexes are less stable than iron(III) complexes but the preference for O-donor ligands is less marked, so that for example [Fe(NH3)6]2+ is known while [Fe(NH3)6]3+ is not. They have a tendency to be oxidized to iron(III) but this can be moderated by low pH and the specific ligands used.[65]

Organometallic compounds

 
Iron penta-
carbonyl

Organoiron chemistry is the study of organometallic compounds of iron, where carbon atoms are covalently bound to the metal atom. They are many and varied, including cyanide complexes, carbonyl complexes, sandwich and half-sandwich compounds.

 
Prussian blue

Prussian blue or "ferric ferrocyanide", Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3, is an old and well-known iron-cyanide complex, extensively used as pigment and in several other applications. Its formation can be used as a simple wet chemistry test to distinguish between aqueous solutions of Fe2+ and Fe3+ as they react (respectively) with potassium ferricyanide and potassium ferrocyanide to form Prussian blue.[56]

Another old example of an organoiron compound is iron pentacarbonyl, Fe(CO)5, in which a neutral iron atom is bound to the carbon atoms of five carbon monoxide molecules. The compound can be used to make carbonyl iron powder, a highly reactive form of metallic iron. Thermolysis of iron pentacarbonyl gives triiron dodecacarbonyl, Fe3(CO)12, a complex with a cluster of three iron atoms at its core. Collman's reagent, disodium tetracarbonylferrate, is a useful reagent for organic chemistry; it contains iron in the −2 oxidation state. Cyclopentadienyliron dicarbonyl dimer contains iron in the rare +1 oxidation state.[71]

 
 
Structural formula of ferrocene and a powdered sample

A landmark in this field was the discovery in 1951 of the remarkably stable sandwich compound ferrocene Fe(C5H5)2, by Pauson and Kealy[72] and independently by Miller and colleagues,[73] whose surprising molecular structure was determined only a year later by Woodward and Wilkinson[74] and Fischer.[75] Ferrocene is still one of the most important tools and models in this class.[76]

Iron-centered organometallic species are used as catalysts. The Knölker complex, for example, is a transfer hydrogenation catalyst for ketones.[77]

Industrial uses

The iron compounds produced on the largest scale in industry are iron(II) sulfate (FeSO4·7H2O) and iron(III) chloride (FeCl3). The former is one of the most readily available sources of iron(II), but is less stable to aerial oxidation than Mohr's salt ((NH4)2Fe(SO4)2·6H2O). Iron(II) compounds tend to be oxidized to iron(III) compounds in the air.[56]

History

Development of iron metallurgy

Iron is one of the elements undoubtedly known to the ancient world.[78] It has been worked, or wrought, for millennia. However, iron artefacts of great age are much rarer than objects made of gold or silver due to the ease with which iron corrodes.[79] The technology developed slowly, and even after the discovery of smelting it took many centuries for iron to replace bronze as the metal of choice for tools and weapons.

Meteoritic iron

 
Iron harpoon head from Greenland. The iron edge covers a narwhal tusk harpoon using meteorite iron from the Cape York meteorite, one of the largest iron meteorites known.

Beads made from meteoric iron in 3500 BC or earlier were found in Gerzeh, Egypt by G.A. Wainwright.[80] The beads contain 7.5% nickel, which is a signature of meteoric origin since iron found in the Earth's crust generally has only minuscule nickel impurities.

Meteoric iron was highly regarded due to its origin in the heavens and was often used to forge weapons and tools.[80] For example, a dagger made of meteoric iron was found in the tomb of Tutankhamun, containing similar proportions of iron, cobalt, and nickel to a meteorite discovered in the area, deposited by an ancient meteor shower.[81][82][83] Items that were likely made of iron by Egyptians date from 3000 to 2500 BC.[79]

Meteoritic iron is comparably soft and ductile and easily cold forged but may get brittle when heated because of the nickel content.[84]

Wrought iron

 
The symbol for Mars has been used since antiquity to represent iron.
 
The iron pillar of Delhi is an example of the iron extraction and processing methodologies of early India.

The first iron production started in the Middle Bronze Age, but it took several centuries before iron displaced bronze. Samples of smelted iron from Asmar, Mesopotamia and Tall Chagar Bazaar in northern Syria were made sometime between 3000 and 2700 BC.[85] The Hittites established an empire in north-central Anatolia around 1600 BC. They appear to be the first to understand the production of iron from its ores and regard it highly in their society.[86] The Hittites began to smelt iron between 1500 and 1200 BC and the practice spread to the rest of the Near East after their empire fell in 1180 BC.[85] The subsequent period is called the Iron Age.

Artifacts of smelted iron are found in India dating from 1800 to 1200 BC,[87] and in the Levant from about 1500 BC (suggesting smelting in Anatolia or the Caucasus).[88][89] Alleged references (compare history of metallurgy in South Asia) to iron in the Indian Vedas have been used for claims of a very early usage of iron in India respectively to date the texts as such. The rigveda term ayas (metal) refers to copper, while iron which is called as śyāma ayas, literally "black copper", first is mentioned in the post-rigvedic Atharvaveda.[90]

Some archaeological evidence suggests iron was smelted in Zimbabwe and southeast Africa as early as the eighth century BC.[91] Iron working was introduced to Greece in the late 11th century BC, from which it spread quickly throughout Europe.[92]

 
Iron sickle from Ancient Greece.

The spread of ironworking in Central and Western Europe is associated with Celtic expansion. According to Pliny the Elder, iron use was common in the Roman era.[80] In the lands of what is now considered China, iron appears approximately 700–500 BC.[93] Iron smelting may have been introduced into China through Central Asia.[94] The earliest evidence of the use of a blast furnace in China dates to the 1st century AD,[95] and cupola furnaces were used as early as the Warring States period (403–221 BC).[96] Usage of the blast and cupola furnace remained widespread during the Tang and Song dynasties.[97]

During the Industrial Revolution in Britain, Henry Cort began refining iron from pig iron to wrought iron (or bar iron) using innovative production systems. In 1783 he patented the puddling process for refining iron ore. It was later improved by others, including Joseph Hall.[98]

Cast iron

Cast iron was first produced in China during 5th century BC,[99] but was hardly in Europe until the medieval period.[100][101] The earliest cast iron artifacts were discovered by archaeologists in what is now modern Luhe County, Jiangsu in China. Cast iron was used in ancient China for warfare, agriculture, and architecture.[102] During the medieval period, means were found in Europe of producing wrought iron from cast iron (in this context known as pig iron) using finery forges. For all these processes, charcoal was required as fuel.[103]

 
Coalbrookdale by Night, 1801. Blast furnaces light the iron making town of Coalbrookdale.

Medieval blast furnaces were about 10 feet (3.0 m) tall and made of fireproof brick; forced air was usually provided by hand-operated bellows.[101] Modern blast furnaces have grown much bigger, with hearths fourteen meters in diameter that allow them to produce thousands of tons of iron each day, but essentially operate in much the same way as they did during medieval times.[103]

In 1709, Abraham Darby I established a coke-fired blast furnace to produce cast iron, replacing charcoal, although continuing to use blast furnaces. The ensuing availability of inexpensive iron was one of the factors leading to the Industrial Revolution. Toward the end of the 18th century, cast iron began to replace wrought iron for certain purposes, because it was cheaper. Carbon content in iron was not implicated as the reason for the differences in properties of wrought iron, cast iron, and steel until the 18th century.[85]

Since iron was becoming cheaper and more plentiful, it also became a major structural material following the building of the innovative first iron bridge in 1778. This bridge still stands today as a monument to the role iron played in the Industrial Revolution. Following this, iron was used in rails, boats, ships, aqueducts, and buildings, as well as in iron cylinders in steam engines.[103] Railways have been central to the formation of modernity and ideas of progress[104] and various languages refer to railways as iron road (e.g. French chemin de fer, German Eisenbahn, Turkish demiryolu, Russian железная дорога, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean 鐵道, Vietnamese đường sắt).

Steel

Steel (with smaller carbon content than pig iron but more than wrought iron) was first produced in antiquity by using a bloomery. Blacksmiths in Luristan in western Persia were making good steel by 1000 BC.[85] Then improved versions, Wootz steel by India and Damascus steel were developed around 300 BC and AD 500 respectively. These methods were specialized, and so steel did not become a major commodity until the 1850s.[105]

New methods of producing it by carburizing bars of iron in the cementation process were devised in the 17th century. In the Industrial Revolution, new methods of producing bar iron without charcoal were devised and these were later applied to produce steel. In the late 1850s, Henry Bessemer invented a new steelmaking process, involving blowing air through molten pig iron, to produce mild steel. This made steel much more economical, thereby leading to wrought iron no longer being produced in large quantities.[106]

Foundations of modern chemistry

In 1774, Antoine Lavoisier used the reaction of water steam with metallic iron inside an incandescent iron tube to produce hydrogen in his experiments leading to the demonstration of the conservation of mass, which was instrumental in changing chemistry from a qualitative science to a quantitative one.[107]

Symbolic role

 
"Gold gab ich für Eisen" – "I gave gold for iron". German-American brooch from WWI.

Iron plays a certain role in mythology and has found various usage as a metaphor and in folklore. The Greek poet Hesiod's Works and Days (lines 109–201) lists different ages of man named after metals like gold, silver, bronze and iron to account for successive ages of humanity.[108] The Iron Age was closely related with Rome, and in Ovid's Metamorphoses

The Virtues, in despair, quit the earth; and the depravity of man becomes universal and complete. Hard steel succeeded then.

— Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I, Iron age, line 160 ff

An example of the importance of iron's symbolic role may be found in the German Campaign of 1813. Frederick William III commissioned then the first Iron Cross as military decoration. Berlin iron jewellery reached its peak production between 1813 and 1815, when the Prussian royal family urged citizens to donate gold and silver jewellery for military funding. The inscription Gold gab ich für Eisen (I gave gold for iron) was used as well in later war efforts.[109]

Production of metallic iron

 
Iron furnace in Columbus, Ohio, 1922

Laboratory routes

For a few limited purposes when it is needed, pure iron is produced in the laboratory in small quantities by reducing the pure oxide or hydroxide with hydrogen, or forming iron pentacarbonyl and heating it to 250 °C so that it decomposes to form pure iron powder.[41] Another method is electrolysis of ferrous chloride onto an iron cathode.[110]

Main industrial route

Iron production 2009 (million tonnes)[111][dubious ]
Country Iron ore Pig iron Direct iron Steel
  China 1,114.9 549.4 573.6
  Australia 393.9 4.4 5.2
  Brazil 305.0 25.1 0.011 26.5
  Japan 66.9 87.5
  India 257.4 38.2 23.4 63.5
  Russia 92.1 43.9 4.7 60.0
  Ukraine 65.8 25.7 29.9
  South Korea 0.1 27.3 48.6
  Germany 0.4 20.1 0.38 32.7
World 1,594.9 914.0 64.5 1,232.4

Nowadays, the industrial production of iron or steel consists of two main stages. In the first stage, iron ore is reduced with coke in a blast furnace, and the molten metal is separated from gross impurities such as silicate minerals. This stage yields an alloy—pig iron—that contains relatively large amounts of carbon. In the second stage, the amount of carbon in the pig iron is lowered by oxidation to yield wrought iron, steel, or cast iron.[112] Other metals can be added at this stage to form alloy steels.

 
17th century Chinese illustration of workers at a blast furnace, making wrought iron from pig iron[113]
 
How iron was extracted in the 19th century

Blast furnace processing

The blast furnace is loaded with iron ores, usually hematite Fe2O3 or magnetite Fe3O4, along with coke (coal that has been separately baked to remove volatile components) and flux (limestone or dolomite). "Blasts" of air pre-heated to 900 °C (sometimes with oxygen enrichment) is blown through the mixture, in sufficient amount to turn the carbon into carbon monoxide:[112]

 

This reaction raises the temperature to about 2000 °C. The carbon monoxide reduces the iron ore to metallic iron[112]

 

Some iron in the high-temperature lower region of the furnace reacts directly with the coke:[112]

 

The flux removes silicaceous minerals in the ore, which would otherwise clog the furnace: The heat of the furnace decomposes the carbonates to calcium oxide, which reacts with any excess silica to form a slag composed of calcium silicate CaSiO3 or other products. At the furnace's temperature, the metal and the slag are both molten. They collect at the bottom as two immiscible liquid layers (with the slag on top), that are then easily separated.[112] The slag can be used as a material in road construction or to improve mineral-poor soils for agriculture.[101]

Steelmaking thus remains one of the largest industrial contributors of CO2 emissions in the world.[114]

 
This heap of iron ore pellets will be used in steel production.

Steelmaking

 
A pot of molten iron being used to make steel

The pig iron produced by the blast furnace process contains up to 4–5% carbon (by mass), with small amounts of other impurities like sulfur, magnesium, phosphorus, and manganese. This high level of carbon makes it relatively weak and brittle. Reducing the amount of carbon to 0.002–2.1% produces steel, which may be up to 1000 times harder than pure iron. A great variety of steel articles can then be made by cold working, hot rolling, forging, machining, etc. Removing the impurities from pig iron, but leaving 2–4% carbon, results in cast iron, which is cast by foundries into articles such as stoves, pipes, radiators, lamp-posts, and rails.[112]

Steel products often undergo various heat treatments after they are forged to shape. Annealing consists of heating them to 700–800 °C for several hours and then gradual cooling. It makes the steel softer and more workable.[115]

Direct iron reduction

Owing to environmental concerns, alternative methods of processing iron have been developed. "Direct iron reduction" reduces iron ore to a ferrous lump called "sponge" iron or "direct" iron that is suitable for steelmaking.[101] Two main reactions comprise the direct reduction process:

Natural gas is partially oxidized (with heat and a catalyst):[101]

 

Iron ore is then treated with these gases in a furnace, producing solid sponge iron:[101]

 

Silica is removed by adding a limestone flux as described above.[101]

Thermite process

Ignition of a mixture of aluminium powder and iron oxide yields metallic iron via the thermite reaction:

 

Alternatively pig iron may be made into steel (with up to about 2% carbon) or wrought iron (commercially pure iron). Various processes have been used for this, including finery forges, puddling furnaces, Bessemer converters, open hearth furnaces, basic oxygen furnaces, and electric arc furnaces. In all cases, the objective is to oxidize some or all of the carbon, together with other impurities. On the other hand, other metals may be added to make alloy steels.[103]

Applications

As structural material

Iron is the most widely used of all the metals, accounting for over 90% of worldwide metal production. Its low cost and high strength often make it the material of choice to withstand stress or transmit forces, such as the construction of machinery and machine tools, rails, automobiles, ship hulls, concrete reinforcing bars, and the load-carrying framework of buildings. Since pure iron is quite soft, it is most commonly combined with alloying elements to make steel.[116]

Mechanical properties

Characteristic values of tensile strength (TS) and Brinell hardness (BH) of various forms of iron.[117][118]
Material TS
(MPa)
BH
(Brinell)
Iron whiskers 11000
Ausformed (hardened)
steel
2930 850–1200
Martensitic steel 2070 600
Bainitic steel 1380 400
Pearlitic steel 1200 350
Cold-worked iron 690 200
Small-grain iron 340 100
Carbon-containing iron 140 40
Pure, single-crystal iron 10 3

The mechanical properties of iron and its alloys are extremely relevant to their structural applications. Those properties can be evaluated in various ways, including the Brinell test, the Rockwell test and the Vickers hardness test.

The properties of pure iron are often used to calibrate measurements or to compare tests.[118][119] However, the mechanical properties of iron are significantly affected by the sample's purity: pure, single crystals of iron are actually softer than aluminium,[117] and the purest industrially produced iron (99.99%) has a hardness of 20–30 Brinell.[120] The pure iron (99.9%~99.999%), especially called electrolytic iron, is industrially produced by electrolytic refining.

An increase in the carbon content will cause a significant increase in the hardness and tensile strength of iron. Maximum hardness of 65 Rc is achieved with a 0.6% carbon content, although the alloy has low tensile strength.[121] Because of the softness of iron, it is much easier to work with than its heavier congeners ruthenium and osmium.[12]

 
Iron-carbon phase diagram

Types of steels and alloys

α-Iron is a fairly soft metal that can dissolve only a small concentration of carbon (no more than 0.021% by mass at 910 °C).[122] Austenite (γ-iron) is similarly soft and metallic but can dissolve considerably more carbon (as much as 2.04% by mass at 1146 °C). This form of iron is used in the type of stainless steel used for making cutlery, and hospital and food-service equipment.[16]

Commercially available iron is classified based on purity and the abundance of additives. Pig iron has 3.5–4.5% carbon[123] and contains varying amounts of contaminants such as sulfur, silicon and phosphorus. Pig iron is not a saleable product, but rather an intermediate step in the production of cast iron and steel. The reduction of contaminants in pig iron that negatively affect material properties, such as sulfur and phosphorus, yields cast iron containing 2–4% carbon, 1–6% silicon, and small amounts of manganese.[112] Pig iron has a melting point in the range of 1420–1470 K, which is lower than either of its two main components, and makes it the first product to be melted when carbon and iron are heated together.[6] Its mechanical properties vary greatly and depend on the form the carbon takes in the alloy.[12]

"White" cast irons contain their carbon in the form of cementite, or iron carbide (Fe3C).[12] This hard, brittle compound dominates the mechanical properties of white cast irons, rendering them hard, but unresistant to shock. The broken surface of a white cast iron is full of fine facets of the broken iron carbide, a very pale, silvery, shiny material, hence the appellation. Cooling a mixture of iron with 0.8% carbon slowly below 723 °C to room temperature results in separate, alternating layers of cementite and α-iron, which is soft and malleable and is called pearlite for its appearance. Rapid cooling, on the other hand, does not allow time for this separation and creates hard and brittle martensite. The steel can then be tempered by reheating to a temperature in between, changing the proportions of pearlite and martensite. The end product below 0.8% carbon content is a pearlite-αFe mixture, and that above 0.8% carbon content is a pearlite-cementite mixture.[12]

In gray iron the carbon exists as separate, fine flakes of graphite, and also renders the material brittle due to the sharp edged flakes of graphite that produce stress concentration sites within the material.[124] A newer variant of gray iron, referred to as ductile iron, is specially treated with trace amounts of magnesium to alter the shape of graphite to spheroids, or nodules, reducing the stress concentrations and vastly increasing the toughness and strength of the material.[124]

Wrought iron contains less than 0.25% carbon but large amounts of slag that give it a fibrous characteristic.[123] It is a tough, malleable product, but not as fusible as pig iron. If honed to an edge, it loses it quickly. Wrought iron is characterized by the presence of fine fibers of slag entrapped within the metal. Wrought iron is more corrosion resistant than steel. It has been almost completely replaced by mild steel for traditional "wrought iron" products and blacksmithing.

Mild steel corrodes more readily than wrought iron, but is cheaper and more widely available. Carbon steel contains 2.0% carbon or less,[125] with small amounts of manganese, sulfur, phosphorus, and silicon. Alloy steels contain varying amounts of carbon as well as other metals, such as chromium, vanadium, molybdenum, nickel, tungsten, etc. Their alloy content raises their cost, and so they are usually only employed for specialist uses. One common alloy steel, though, is stainless steel. Recent developments in ferrous metallurgy have produced a growing range of microalloyed steels, also termed 'HSLA' or high-strength, low alloy steels, containing tiny additions to produce high strengths and often spectacular toughness at minimal cost.[125][126][127]

Alloys with high purity elemental makeups (such as alloys of electrolytic iron) have specifically enhanced properties such as ductility, tensile strength, toughness, fatigue strength, heat resistance, and corrosion resistance.

Apart from traditional applications, iron is also used for protection from ionizing radiation. Although it is lighter than another traditional protection material, lead, it is much stronger mechanically. The attenuation of radiation as a function of energy is shown in the graph.[128]

The main disadvantage of iron and steel is that pure iron, and most of its alloys, suffer badly from rust if not protected in some way, a cost amounting to over 1% of the world's economy.[129] Painting, galvanization, passivation, plastic coating and bluing are all used to protect iron from rust by excluding water and oxygen or by cathodic protection. The mechanism of the rusting of iron is as follows:[129]

Cathode: 3 O2 + 6 H2O + 12 e → 12 OH
Anode: 4 Fe → 4 Fe2+ + 8 e; 4 Fe2+ → 4 Fe3+ + 4 e
Overall: 4 Fe + 3 O2 + 6 H2O → 4 Fe3+ + 12 OH → 4 Fe(OH)3 or 4 FeO(OH) + 4 H2O

The electrolyte is usually iron(II) sulfate in urban areas (formed when atmospheric sulfur dioxide attacks iron), and salt particles in the atmosphere in seaside areas.[129]

Catalysts and reagents

Because Fe is inexpensive and nontoxic, much effort has been devoted to the development of Fe-based catalysts and reagents. Iron is however less common as a catalyst in commercial processes than more expensive metals.[130] In biology, Fe-containing enzymes are pervasive.[131]

Iron catalysts are traditionally used in the Haber–Bosch process for the production of ammonia and the Fischer–Tropsch process for conversion of carbon monoxide to hydrocarbons for fuels and lubricants.[132] Powdered iron in an acidic medium is used in the Bechamp reduction, the conversion of nitrobenzene to aniline.[133]

Iron compounds

Iron(III) oxide mixed with aluminium powder can be ignited to create a thermite reaction, used in welding large iron parts (like rails) and purifying ores. Iron(III) oxide and oxyhydroxide are used as reddish and ocher pigments.

Iron(III) chloride finds use in water purification and sewage treatment, in the dyeing of cloth, as a coloring agent in paints, as an additive in animal feed, and as an etchant for copper in the manufacture of printed circuit boards.[134] It can also be dissolved in alcohol to form tincture of iron, which is used as a medicine to stop bleeding in canaries.[135]

Iron(II) sulfate is used as a precursor to other iron compounds. It is also used to reduce chromate in cement. It is used to fortify foods and treat iron deficiency anemia. Iron(III) sulfate is used in settling minute sewage particles in tank water. Iron(II) chloride is used as a reducing flocculating agent, in the formation of iron complexes and magnetic iron oxides, and as a reducing agent in organic synthesis.[134]

Sodium nitroprusside is a drug used as a vasodilator. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[136]

Biological and pathological role

Iron is required for life.[5][137][138] The iron–sulfur clusters are pervasive and include nitrogenase, the enzymes responsible for biological nitrogen fixation. Iron-containing proteins participate in transport, storage and use of oxygen.[5] Iron proteins are involved in electron transfer.[139]

 
Simplified structure of Heme b; in the protein additional ligand(s) are attached to Fe.

Examples of iron-containing proteins in higher organisms include hemoglobin, cytochrome (see high-valent iron), and catalase.[5][140] The average adult human contains about 0.005% body weight of iron, or about four grams, of which three quarters is in hemoglobin – a level that remains constant despite only about one milligram of iron being absorbed each day,[139] because the human body recycles its hemoglobin for the iron content.[141]

Microbial growth may be assisted by oxidation of iron(II) or by reduction of iron (III).[142]

Biochemistry

Iron acquisition poses a problem for aerobic organisms because ferric iron is poorly soluble near neutral pH. Thus, these organisms have developed means to absorb iron as complexes, sometimes taking up ferrous iron before oxidising it back to ferric iron.[5] In particular, bacteria have evolved very high-affinity sequestering agents called siderophores.[143][144][145]

After uptake in human cells, iron storage is precisely regulated.[5][146] A major component of this regulation is the protein transferrin, which binds iron ions absorbed from the duodenum and carries it in the blood to cells.[5][147] Transferrin contains Fe3+ in the middle of a distorted octahedron, bonded to one nitrogen, three oxygens and a chelating carbonate anion that traps the Fe3+ ion: it has such a high stability constant that it is very effective at taking up Fe3+ ions even from the most stable complexes. At the bone marrow, transferrin is reduced from Fe3+ and Fe2+ and stored as ferritin to be incorporated into hemoglobin.[139]

The most commonly known and studied bioinorganic iron compounds (biological iron molecules) are the heme proteins: examples are hemoglobin, myoglobin, and cytochrome P450.[5] These compounds participate in transporting gases, building enzymes, and transferring electrons.[139] Metalloproteins are a group of proteins with metal ion cofactors. Some examples of iron metalloproteins are ferritin and rubredoxin.[139] Many enzymes vital to life contain iron, such as catalase,[148] lipoxygenases,[149] and IRE-BP.[150]

Hemoglobin is an oxygen carrier that occurs in red blood cells and contributes their color, transporting oxygen in the arteries from the lungs to the muscles where it is transferred to myoglobin, which stores it until it is needed for the metabolic oxidation of glucose, generating energy.[5] Here the hemoglobin binds to carbon dioxide, produced when glucose is oxidized, which is transported through the veins by hemoglobin (predominantly as bicarbonate anions) back to the lungs where it is exhaled.[139] In hemoglobin, the iron is in one of four heme groups and has six possible coordination sites; four are occupied by nitrogen atoms in a porphyrin ring, the fifth by an imidazole nitrogen in a histidine residue of one of the protein chains attached to the heme group, and the sixth is reserved for the oxygen molecule it can reversibly bind to.[139] When hemoglobin is not attached to oxygen (and is then called deoxyhemoglobin), the Fe2+ ion at the center of the heme group (in the hydrophobic protein interior) is in a high-spin configuration. It is thus too large to fit inside the porphyrin ring, which bends instead into a dome with the Fe2+ ion about 55 picometers above it. In this configuration, the sixth coordination site reserved for the oxygen is blocked by another histidine residue.[139]

When deoxyhemoglobin picks up an oxygen molecule, this histidine residue moves away and returns once the oxygen is securely attached to form a hydrogen bond with it. This results in the Fe2+ ion switching to a low-spin configuration, resulting in a 20% decrease in ionic radius so that now it can fit into the porphyrin ring, which becomes planar.[139] (Additionally, this hydrogen bonding results in the tilting of the oxygen molecule, resulting in a Fe–O–O bond angle of around 120° that avoids the formation of Fe–O–Fe or Fe–O2–Fe bridges that would lead to electron transfer, the oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+, and the destruction of hemoglobin.) This results in a movement of all the protein chains that leads to the other subunits of hemoglobin changing shape to a form with larger oxygen affinity. Thus, when deoxyhemoglobin takes up oxygen, its affinity for more oxygen increases, and vice versa.[139] Myoglobin, on the other hand, contains only one heme group and hence this cooperative effect cannot occur. Thus, while hemoglobin is almost saturated with oxygen in the high partial pressures of oxygen found in the lungs, its affinity for oxygen is much lower than that of myoglobin, which oxygenates even at low partial pressures of oxygen found in muscle tissue.[139] As described by the Bohr effect (named after Christian Bohr, the father of Niels Bohr), the oxygen affinity of hemoglobin diminishes in the presence of carbon dioxide.[139]

 
A heme unit of human carboxyhemoglobin, showing the carbonyl ligand at the apical position, trans to the histidine residue[151]

Carbon monoxide and phosphorus trifluoride are poisonous to humans because they bind to hemoglobin similarly to oxygen, but with much more strength, so that oxygen can no longer be transported throughout the body. Hemoglobin bound to carbon monoxide is known as carboxyhemoglobin. This effect also plays a minor role in the toxicity of cyanide, but there the major effect is by far its interference with the proper functioning of the electron transport protein cytochrome a.[139] The cytochrome proteins also involve heme groups and are involved in the metabolic oxidation of glucose by oxygen. The sixth coordination site is then occupied by either another imidazole nitrogen or a methionine sulfur, so that these proteins are largely inert to oxygen – with the exception of cytochrome a, which bonds directly to oxygen and thus is very easily poisoned by cyanide.[139] Here, the electron transfer takes place as the iron remains in low spin but changes between the +2 and +3 oxidation states. Since the reduction potential of each step is slightly greater than the previous one, the energy is released step-by-step and can thus be stored in adenosine triphosphate. Cytochrome a is slightly distinct, as it occurs at the mitochondrial membrane, binds directly to oxygen, and transports protons as well as electrons, as follows:[139]

4 Cytc2+ + O2 + 8H+
inside
→ 4 Cytc3+ + 2 H2O + 4H+
outside

Although the heme proteins are the most important class of iron-containing proteins, the iron–sulfur proteins are also very important, being involved in electron transfer, which is possible since iron can exist stably in either the +2 or +3 oxidation states. These have one, two, four, or eight iron atoms that are each approximately tetrahedrally coordinated to four sulfur atoms; because of this tetrahedral coordination, they always have high-spin iron. The simplest of such compounds is rubredoxin, which has only one iron atom coordinated to four sulfur atoms from cysteine residues in the surrounding peptide chains. Another important class of iron–sulfur proteins is the ferredoxins, which have multiple iron atoms. Transferrin does not belong to either of these classes.[139]

The ability of sea mussels to maintain their grip on rocks in the ocean is facilitated by their use of organometallic iron-based bonds in their protein-rich cuticles. Based on synthetic replicas, the presence of iron in these structures increased elastic modulus 770 times, tensile strength 58 times, and toughness 92 times. The amount of stress required to permanently damage them increased 76 times.[152]

Nutrition

Diet

Iron is pervasive, but particularly rich sources of dietary iron include red meat, oysters, beans, poultry, fish, leaf vegetables, watercress, tofu, and blackstrap molasses.[5] Bread and breakfast cereals are sometimes specifically fortified with iron.[5][153]

Iron provided by dietary supplements is often found as iron(II) fumarate, although iron(II) sulfate is cheaper and is absorbed equally well.[134] Elemental iron, or reduced iron, despite being absorbed at only one-third to two-thirds the efficiency (relative to iron sulfate),[154] is often added to foods such as breakfast cereals or enriched wheat flour. Iron is most available to the body when chelated to amino acids[155] and is also available for use as a common iron supplement. Glycine, the least expensive amino acid, is most often used to produce iron glycinate supplements.[156]

Dietary recommendations

The U.S. Institute of Medicine (IOM) updated Estimated Average Requirements (EARs) and Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs) for iron in 2001.[5] The current EAR for iron for women ages 14–18 is 7.9 mg/day, 8.1 for ages 19–50 and 5.0 thereafter (post menopause). For men the EAR is 6.0 mg/day for ages 19 and up. The RDA is 15.0 mg/day for women ages 15–18, 18.0 for 19–50 and 8.0 thereafter. For men, 8.0 mg/day for ages 19 and up. RDAs are higher than EARs so as to identify amounts that will cover people with higher than average requirements. RDA for pregnancy is 27 mg/day and, for lactation, 9 mg/day.[5] For children ages 1–3 years 7 mg/day, 10 for ages 4–8 and 8 for ages 9–13. As for safety, the IOM also sets Tolerable upper intake levels (ULs) for vitamins and minerals when evidence is sufficient. In the case of iron the UL is set at 45 mg/day. Collectively the EARs, RDAs and ULs are referred to as Dietary Reference Intakes.[157]

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) refers to the collective set of information as Dietary Reference Values, with Population Reference Intake (PRI) instead of RDA, and Average Requirement instead of EAR. AI and UL defined the same as in United States. For women the PRI is 13 mg/day ages 15–17 years, 16 mg/day for women ages 18 and up who are premenopausal and 11 mg/day postmenopausal. For pregnancy and lactation, 16 mg/day. For men the PRI is 11 mg/day ages 15 and older. For children ages 1 to 14 the PRI increases from 7 to 11 mg/day. The PRIs are higher than the U.S. RDAs, with the exception of pregnancy.[158] The EFSA reviewed the same safety question did not establish a UL.[159]

Infants may require iron supplements if they are bottle-fed cow's milk.[160] Frequent blood donors are at risk of low iron levels and are often advised to supplement their iron intake.[161]

For U.S. food and dietary supplement labeling purposes the amount in a serving is expressed as a percent of Daily Value (%DV). For iron labeling purposes 100% of the Daily Value was 18 mg, and as of May 27, 2016 remained unchanged at 18 mg.[162][163] A table of the old and new adult daily values is provided at Reference Daily Intake.

Deficiency

Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in the world.[5][164][165][166] When loss of iron is not adequately compensated by adequate dietary iron intake, a state of latent iron deficiency occurs, which over time leads to iron-deficiency anemia if left untreated, which is characterised by an insufficient number of red blood cells and an insufficient amount of hemoglobin.[167] Children, pre-menopausal women (women of child-bearing age), and people with poor diet are most susceptible to the disease. Most cases of iron-deficiency anemia are mild, but if not treated can cause problems like fast or irregular heartbeat, complications during pregnancy, and delayed growth in infants and children.[168]

Excess

Iron uptake is tightly regulated by the human body, which has no regulated physiological means of excreting iron. Only small amounts of iron are lost daily due to mucosal and skin epithelial cell sloughing, so control of iron levels is primarily accomplished by regulating uptake.[169] Regulation of iron uptake is impaired in some people as a result of a genetic defect that maps to the HLA-H gene region on chromosome 6 and leads to abnormally low levels of hepcidin, a key regulator of the entry of iron into the circulatory system in mammals.[170] In these people, excessive iron intake can result in iron overload disorders, known medically as hemochromatosis.[5] Many people have an undiagnosed genetic susceptibility to iron overload, and are not aware of a family history of the problem. For this reason, people should not take iron supplements unless they suffer from iron deficiency and have consulted a doctor. Hemochromatosis is estimated to be the cause of 0.3 to 0.8% of all metabolic diseases of Caucasians.[171]

Overdoses of ingested iron can cause excessive levels of free iron in the blood. High blood levels of free ferrous iron react with peroxides to produce highly reactive free radicals that can damage DNA, proteins, lipids, and other cellular components. Iron toxicity occurs when the cell contains free iron, which generally occurs when iron levels exceed the availability of transferrin to bind the iron. Damage to the cells of the gastrointestinal tract can also prevent them from regulating iron absorption, leading to further increases in blood levels. Iron typically damages cells in the heart, liver and elsewhere, causing adverse effects that include coma, metabolic acidosis, shock, liver failure, coagulopathy, long-term organ damage, and even death.[172] Humans experience iron toxicity when the iron exceeds 20 milligrams for every kilogram of body mass; 60 milligrams per kilogram is considered a lethal dose.[173] Overconsumption of iron, often the result of children eating large quantities of ferrous sulfate tablets intended for adult consumption, is one of the most common toxicological causes of death in children under six.[173] The Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) sets the Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) for adults at 45 mg/day. For children under fourteen years old the UL is 40 mg/day.[174]

The medical management of iron toxicity is complicated, and can include use of a specific chelating agent called deferoxamine to bind and expel excess iron from the body.[172][175][176]

ADHD

Some research has suggested that low thalamic iron levels may play a role in the pathophysiology of ADHD.[177] Some researchers have found that iron supplementation can be effective especially in the inattentive subtype of the disorder.[178] One study also showed that iron may be able to decrease the risk of cardiovascular events during treatment with ADHD drugs.[179]

Some researchers in the 2000s suggested a link between low levels of iron in the blood and ADHD. A 2012 study found no such correlation.[180]

Cancer

The role of iron in cancer defense can be described as a "double-edged sword" because of its pervasive presence in non-pathological processes.[181] People having chemotherapy may develop iron deficiency and anemia, for which intravenous iron therapy is used to restore iron levels.[182] Iron overload, which may occur from high consumption of red meat,[5] may initiate tumor growth and increase susceptibility to cancer onset,[182] particularly for colorectal cancer.[5]

Marine systems

Iron plays an essential role in marine systems and can act as a limiting nutrient for planktonic activity.[183] Because of this, too much of a decrease in iron may lead to a decrease in growth rates in phytoplanktonic organisms such as diatoms.[184] Iron can also be oxidized by marine microbes under conditions that are high in iron and low in oxygen.[185]

Iron can enter marine systems through adjoining rivers and directly from the atmosphere. Once iron enters the ocean, it can be distributed throughout the water column through ocean mixing and through recycling on the cellular level.[186] In the arctic, sea ice plays a major role in the store and distribution of iron in the ocean, depleting oceanic iron as it freezes in the winter and releasing it back into the water when thawing occurs in the summer.[187] The iron cycle can fluctuate the forms of iron from aqueous to particle forms altering the availability of iron to primary producers.[188] Increased light and warmth increases the amount of iron that is in forms that are usable by primary producers.[189]

See also

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Bibliography

Further reading

  • H.R. Schubert, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry ... to 1775 AD (Routledge, London, 1957)
  • R.F. Tylecote, History of Metallurgy (Institute of Materials, London 1992).
  • R.F. Tylecote, "Iron in the Industrial Revolution" in J. Day and R.F. Tylecote, The Industrial Revolution in Metals (Institute of Materials 1991), 200–60.

External links

  • It's Elemental – Iron
  • Iron at The Periodic Table of Videos (University of Nottingham)
  • Metallurgy for the non-Metallurgist
  • Iron by J.B. Calvert

iron, this, article, about, metallic, element, other, uses, disambiguation, chemical, element, with, symbol, from, latin, ferrum, atomic, number, metal, that, belongs, first, transition, series, group, periodic, table, mass, most, common, element, earth, just,. This article is about the metallic element For other uses see Iron disambiguation Iron ˈ aɪ e n or ˈ aɪ er n is a chemical element with symbol Fe from Latin ferrum and atomic number 26 It is a metal that belongs to the first transition series and group 8 of the periodic table It is by mass the most common element on Earth just ahead of oxygen 32 1 and 30 1 respectively forming much of Earth s outer and inner core It is the fourth most common element in the Earth s crust being mainly deposited by meteorites in its metallic state with its ores also being found there Iron 26FeIronAllotropessee Allotropes of ironAppearancelustrous metallic with a grayish tingeStandard atomic weight Ar Fe 55 845 0 00255 845 0 002 abridged 1 Iron in the periodic tableHydrogen HeliumLithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine NeonSodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine ArgonPotassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine KryptonRubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine XenonCaesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury element Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine RadonFrancium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson Fe Rumanganese iron cobaltAtomic number Z 26Groupgroup 8Periodperiod 4Block d blockElectron configuration Ar 3d6 4s2Electrons per shell2 8 14 2Physical propertiesPhase at STPsolidMelting point1811 K 1538 C 2800 F Boiling point3134 K 2862 C 5182 F Density near r t 7 874 g cm3when liquid at m p 6 98 g cm3Heat of fusion13 81 kJ molHeat of vaporization340 kJ molMolar heat capacity25 10 J mol K Vapor pressureP Pa 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 kat T K 1728 1890 2091 2346 2679 3132Atomic propertiesOxidation states 4 2 1 0 1 2 2 3 4 5 3 6 7 4 an amphoteric oxide ElectronegativityPauling scale 1 83Ionization energies1st 762 5 kJ mol2nd 1561 9 kJ mol3rd 2957 kJ mol more Atomic radiusempirical 126 pmCovalent radiusLow spin 132 3 pmHigh spin 152 6 pmVan der Waals radius194 1 pmSpectral lines of ironOther propertiesNatural occurrenceprimordialCrystal structure body centered cubic bcc a 286 65 pmCrystal structure face centered cubic fcc between 1185 1667 K a 364 680 pmSpeed of sound thin rod5120 m s at r t electrolytic Thermal expansion11 8 µm m K at 25 C Thermal conductivity80 4 W m K Electrical resistivity96 1 nW m at 20 C Curie point1043 KMagnetic orderingferromagneticYoung s modulus211 GPaShear modulus82 GPaBulk modulus170 GPaPoisson ratio0 29Mohs hardness4Vickers hardness608 MPaBrinell hardness200 1180 MPaCAS Number7439 89 6HistoryDiscoverybefore 5000 BCSymbol Fe from Latin ferrumMain isotopes of ironveIso tope Decayabun dance half life t1 2 mode pro duct54Fe 5 85 stable55Fe syn 2 73 y e 55Mn56Fe 91 75 stable57Fe 2 12 stable58Fe 0 28 stable59Fe syn 44 6 d b 59Co60Fe trace 2 6 106 y b 60Co Category Ironviewtalkedit referencesExtracting usable metal from iron ores requires kilns or furnaces capable of reaching 1 500 C 2 730 F or higher about 500 C 932 F higher than that required to smelt copper Humans started to master that process in Eurasia during the 2nd millennium BCE and the use of iron tools and weapons began to displace copper alloys in some regions only around 1200 BCE That event is considered the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age In the modern world iron alloys such as steel stainless steel cast iron and special steels are by far the most common industrial metals due to their mechanical properties and low cost The iron and steel industry is thus very important economically and iron is the cheapest metal with a price of a few dollars per kilogram or pound Pristine and smooth pure iron surfaces are a mirror like silvery gray Iron reacts readily with oxygen and water to produce brown to black hydrated iron oxides commonly known as rust Unlike the oxides of some other metals that form passivating layers rust occupies more volume than the metal and thus flakes off exposing more fresh surfaces for corrosion High purity irons e g electrolytic iron are more resistant to corrosion The body of an adult human contains about 4 grams 0 005 body weight of iron mostly in hemoglobin and myoglobin These two proteins play essential roles in vertebrate metabolism respectively oxygen transport by blood and oxygen storage in muscles To maintain the necessary levels human iron metabolism requires a minimum of iron in the diet Iron is also the metal at the active site of many important redox enzymes dealing with cellular respiration and oxidation and reduction in plants and animals 5 Chemically the most common oxidation states of iron are iron II and iron III Iron shares many properties of other transition metals including the other group 8 elements ruthenium and osmium Iron forms compounds in a wide range of oxidation states 2 to 7 Iron also forms many coordination compounds some of them such as ferrocene ferrioxalate and Prussian blue have substantial industrial medical or research applications Contents 1 Characteristics 1 1 Allotropes 1 2 Melting and boiling points 1 3 Magnetic properties 1 4 Isotopes 2 Origin and occurrence in nature 2 1 Cosmogenesis 2 2 Metallic iron 2 3 Mantle minerals 2 4 Earth s crust 2 5 Oceans 3 Chemistry and compounds 3 1 Binary compounds 3 1 1 Oxides and sulfides 3 1 2 Halides 3 2 Solution chemistry 3 3 Coordination compounds 3 4 Organometallic compounds 3 5 Industrial uses 4 History 4 1 Development of iron metallurgy 4 1 1 Meteoritic iron 4 1 2 Wrought iron 4 1 3 Cast iron 4 1 4 Steel 4 2 Foundations of modern chemistry 5 Symbolic role 6 Production of metallic iron 6 1 Laboratory routes 6 2 Main industrial route 6 2 1 Blast furnace processing 6 2 2 Steelmaking 6 3 Direct iron reduction 6 4 Thermite process 7 Applications 7 1 As structural material 7 1 1 Mechanical properties 7 1 2 Types of steels and alloys 7 2 Catalysts and reagents 7 3 Iron compounds 8 Biological and pathological role 8 1 Biochemistry 8 2 Nutrition 8 2 1 Diet 8 2 2 Dietary recommendations 8 3 Deficiency 8 4 Excess 8 5 ADHD 8 6 Cancer 8 7 Marine systems 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksCharacteristicsAllotropes Main article Allotropes of iron Molar volume vs pressure for a iron at room temperature At least four allotropes of iron differing atom arrangements in the solid are known conventionally denoted a g d and e Low pressure phase diagram of pure iron The first three forms are observed at ordinary pressures As molten iron cools past its freezing point of 1538 C it crystallizes into its d allotrope which has a body centered cubic bcc crystal structure As it cools further to 1394 C it changes to its g iron allotrope a face centered cubic fcc crystal structure or austenite At 912 C and below the crystal structure again becomes the bcc a iron allotrope 6 The physical properties of iron at very high pressures and temperatures have also been studied extensively 7 8 because of their relevance to theories about the cores of the Earth and other planets Above approximately 10 GPa and temperatures of a few hundred kelvin or less a iron changes into another hexagonal close packed hcp structure which is also known as e iron The higher temperature g phase also changes into e iron but does so at higher pressure Some controversial experimental evidence exists for a stable b phase at pressures above 50 GPa and temperatures of at least 1500 K It is supposed to have an orthorhombic or a double hcp structure 9 Confusingly the term b iron is sometimes also used to refer to a iron above its Curie point when it changes from being ferromagnetic to paramagnetic even though its crystal structure has not changed 6 The inner core of the Earth is generally presumed to consist of an iron nickel alloy with e or b structure 10 Melting and boiling points The melting and boiling points of iron along with its enthalpy of atomization are lower than those of the earlier 3d elements from scandium to chromium showing the lessened contribution of the 3d electrons to metallic bonding as they are attracted more and more into the inert core by the nucleus 11 however they are higher than the values for the previous element manganese because that element has a half filled 3d sub shell and consequently its d electrons are not easily delocalized This same trend appears for ruthenium but not osmium 12 The melting point of iron is experimentally well defined for pressures less than 50 GPa For greater pressures published data as of 2007 still varies by tens of gigapascals and over a thousand kelvin 13 Magnetic properties Magnetization curves of 9 ferromagnetic materials showing saturation 1 Sheet steel 2 Silicon steel 3 Cast steel 4 Tungsten steel 5 Magnet steel 6 Cast iron 7 Nickel 8 Cobalt 9 Magnetite 14 Below its Curie point of 770 C 1 420 F 1 040 K a iron changes from paramagnetic to ferromagnetic the spins of the two unpaired electrons in each atom generally align with the spins of its neighbors creating an overall magnetic field 15 This happens because the orbitals of those two electrons dz2 and dx2 y2 do not point toward neighboring atoms in the lattice and therefore are not involved in metallic bonding 6 In the absence of an external source of magnetic field the atoms get spontaneously partitioned into magnetic domains about 10 micrometers across 16 such that the atoms in each domain have parallel spins but some domains have other orientations Thus a macroscopic piece of iron will have a nearly zero overall magnetic field Application of an external magnetic field causes the domains that are magnetized in the same general direction to grow at the expense of adjacent ones that point in other directions reinforcing the external field This effect is exploited in devices that need to channel magnetic fields to fulfill design function such as electrical transformers magnetic recording heads and electric motors Impurities lattice defects or grain and particle boundaries can pin the domains in the new positions so that the effect persists even after the external field is removed thus turning the iron object into a permanent magnet 15 Similar behavior is exhibited by some iron compounds such as the ferrites including the mineral magnetite a crystalline form of the mixed iron II III oxide Fe3O4 although the atomic scale mechanism ferrimagnetism is somewhat different Pieces of magnetite with natural permanent magnetization lodestones provided the earliest compasses for navigation Particles of magnetite were extensively used in magnetic recording media such as core memories magnetic tapes floppies and disks until they were replaced by cobalt based materials Isotopes Main article Isotopes of iron Iron has four stable isotopes 54Fe 5 845 of natural iron 56Fe 91 754 57Fe 2 119 and 58Fe 0 282 24 artificial isotopes have also been created Of these stable isotopes only 57Fe has a nuclear spin 1 2 The nuclide 54Fe theoretically can undergo double electron capture to 54Cr but the process has never been observed and only a lower limit on the half life of 3 1 1022 years has been established 17 60Fe is an extinct radionuclide of long half life 2 6 million years 18 It is not found on Earth but its ultimate decay product is its granddaughter the stable nuclide 60Ni 17 Much of the past work on isotopic composition of iron has focused on the nucleosynthesis of 60Fe through studies of meteorites and ore formation In the last decade advances in mass spectrometry have allowed the detection and quantification of minute naturally occurring variations in the ratios of the stable isotopes of iron Much of this work is driven by the Earth and planetary science communities although applications to biological and industrial systems are emerging 19 In phases of the meteorites Semarkona and Chervony Kut a correlation between the concentration of 60Ni the granddaughter of 60Fe and the abundance of the stable iron isotopes provided evidence for the existence of 60Fe at the time of formation of the Solar System Possibly the energy released by the decay of 60Fe along with that released by 26Al contributed to the remelting and differentiation of asteroids after their formation 4 6 billion years ago The abundance of 60Ni present in extraterrestrial material may bring further insight into the origin and early history of the Solar System 20 The most abundant iron isotope 56Fe is of particular interest to nuclear scientists because it represents the most common endpoint of nucleosynthesis 21 Since 56Ni 14 alpha particles is easily produced from lighter nuclei in the alpha process in nuclear reactions in supernovae see silicon burning process it is the endpoint of fusion chains inside extremely massive stars since addition of another alpha particle resulting in 60Zn requires a great deal more energy This 56Ni which has a half life of about 6 days is created in quantity in these stars but soon decays by two successive positron emissions within supernova decay products in the supernova remnant gas cloud first to radioactive 56Co and then to stable 56Fe As such iron is the most abundant element in the core of red giants and is the most abundant metal in iron meteorites and in the dense metal cores of planets such as Earth 22 It is also very common in the universe relative to other stable metals of approximately the same atomic weight 22 23 Iron is the sixth most abundant element in the universe and the most common refractory element 24 Although a further tiny energy gain could be extracted by synthesizing 62Ni which has a marginally higher binding energy than 56Fe conditions in stars are unsuitable for this process Element production in supernovas greatly favor iron over nickel and in any case 56Fe still has a lower mass per nucleon than 62Ni due to its higher fraction of lighter protons 25 Hence elements heavier than iron require a supernova for their formation involving rapid neutron capture by starting 56Fe nuclei 22 In the far future of the universe assuming that proton decay does not occur cold fusion occurring via quantum tunnelling would cause the light nuclei in ordinary matter to fuse into 56Fe nuclei Fission and alpha particle emission would then make heavy nuclei decay into iron converting all stellar mass objects to cold spheres of pure iron 26 Origin and occurrence in natureCosmogenesis Iron s abundance in rocky planets like Earth is due to its abundant production during the runaway fusion and explosion of type Ia supernovae which scatters the iron into space 27 28 Metallic iron A polished and chemically etched piece of an iron meteorite believed to be similar in composition to the Earth s metallic core showing individual crystals of the iron nickel alloy Widmanstatten pattern Metallic or native iron is rarely found on the surface of the Earth because it tends to oxidize However both the Earth s inner and outer core that account for 35 of the mass of the whole Earth are believed to consist largely of an iron alloy possibly with nickel Electric currents in the liquid outer core are believed to be the origin of the Earth s magnetic field The other terrestrial planets Mercury Venus and Mars as well as the Moon are believed to have a metallic core consisting mostly of iron The M type asteroids are also believed to be partly or mostly made of metallic iron alloy The rare iron meteorites are the main form of natural metallic iron on the Earth s surface Items made of cold worked meteoritic iron have been found in various archaeological sites dating from a time when iron smelting had not yet been developed and the Inuit in Greenland have been reported to use iron from the Cape York meteorite for tools and hunting weapons 29 About 1 in 20 meteorites consist of the unique iron nickel minerals taenite 35 80 iron and kamacite 90 95 iron 30 Native iron is also rarely found in basalts that have formed from magmas that have come into contact with carbon rich sedimentary rocks which have reduced the oxygen fugacity sufficiently for iron to crystallize This is known as Telluric iron and is described from a few localities such as Disko Island in West Greenland Yakutia in Russia and Buhl in Germany 31 Mantle minerals Ferropericlase Mg Fe O a solid solution of periclase MgO and wustite FeO makes up about 20 of the volume of the lower mantle of the Earth which makes it the second most abundant mineral phase in that region after silicate perovskite Mg Fe SiO3 it also is the major host for iron in the lower mantle 32 At the bottom of the transition zone of the mantle the reaction g Mg Fe 2 SiO4 Mg Fe SiO3 Mg Fe O transforms g olivine into a mixture of silicate perovskite and ferropericlase and vice versa In the literature this mineral phase of the lower mantle is also often called magnesiowustite 33 Silicate perovskite may form up to 93 of the lower mantle 34 and the magnesium iron form Mg Fe SiO3 is considered to be the most abundant mineral in the Earth making up 38 of its volume 35 Earth s crust Ochre path in Roussillon While iron is the most abundant element on Earth most of this iron is concentrated in the inner and outer cores 36 37 The fraction of iron that is in Earth s crust only amounts to about 5 of the overall mass of the crust and is thus only the fourth most abundant element in that layer after oxygen silicon and aluminium 38 Most of the iron in the crust is combined with various other elements to form many iron minerals An important class is the iron oxide minerals such as hematite Fe2O3 magnetite Fe3O4 and siderite FeCO3 which are the major ores of iron Many igneous rocks also contain the sulfide minerals pyrrhotite and pentlandite 39 40 During weathering iron tends to leach from sulfide deposits as the sulfate and from silicate deposits as the bicarbonate Both of these are oxidized in aqueous solution and precipitate in even mildly elevated pH as iron III oxide 41 Banded iron formation in McKinley Park Minnesota Large deposits of iron are banded iron formations a type of rock consisting of repeated thin layers of iron oxides alternating with bands of iron poor shale and chert The banded iron formations were laid down in the time between 3 700 million years ago and 1 800 million years ago 42 43 Materials containing finely ground iron III oxides or oxide hydroxides such as ochre have been used as yellow red and brown pigments since pre historical times They contribute as well to the color of various rocks and clays including entire geological formations like the Painted Hills in Oregon and the Buntsandstein colored sandstone British Bunter 44 Through Eisensandstein a jurassic iron sandstone e g from Donzdorf in Germany 45 and Bath stone in the UK iron compounds are responsible for the yellowish color of many historical buildings and sculptures 46 The proverbial red color of the surface of Mars is derived from an iron oxide rich regolith 47 Significant amounts of iron occur in the iron sulfide mineral pyrite FeS2 but it is difficult to extract iron from it and it is therefore not exploited 48 In fact iron is so common that production generally focuses only on ores with very high quantities of it 49 According to the International Resource Panel s Metal Stocks in Society report the global stock of iron in use in society is 2 200 kg per capita More developed countries differ in this respect from less developed countries 7 000 14 000 vs 2 000 kg per capita 50 Oceans Ocean science demonstrated the role of the iron in the ancient seas in both marine biota and climate 51 Chemistry and compoundsSee also Category Iron compounds Oxidation state Representative compound 2 d10 Disodium tetracarbonylferrate Collman s reagent 1 d9 Fe2 CO 2 80 d8 Iron pentacarbonyl1 d7 Cyclopentadienyliron dicarbonyl dimer Fp2 2 d6 Ferrous sulfate ferrocene3 d5 Ferric chloride ferrocenium tetrafluoroborate4 d4 Fe diars 2 Cl2 2 Ferryl tetrafluoroborate5 d3 FeO3 46 d2 Potassium ferrate7 d1 FeO4 matrix isolation 4K Iron shows the characteristic chemical properties of the transition metals namely the ability to form variable oxidation states differing by steps of one and a very large coordination and organometallic chemistry indeed it was the discovery of an iron compound ferrocene that revolutionalized the latter field in the 1950s 52 Iron is sometimes considered as a prototype for the entire block of transition metals due to its abundance and the immense role it has played in the technological progress of humanity 53 Its 26 electrons are arranged in the configuration Ar 3d64s2 of which the 3d and 4s electrons are relatively close in energy and thus a number of electrons can be ionized 12 Iron forms compounds mainly in the oxidation states 2 iron II ferrous and 3 iron III ferric Iron also occurs in higher oxidation states e g the purple potassium ferrate K2FeO4 which contains iron in its 6 oxidation state The anion FeO4 with iron in its 7 oxidation state along with an iron V peroxo isomer has been detected by infrared spectroscopy at 4 K after cocondensation of laser ablated Fe atoms with a mixture of O2 Ar 54 Iron IV is a common intermediate in many biochemical oxidation reactions 55 56 Numerous organoiron compounds contain formal oxidation states of 1 0 1 or even 2 The oxidation states and other bonding properties are often assessed using the technique of Mossbauer spectroscopy 57 Many mixed valence compounds contain both iron II and iron III centers such as magnetite and Prussian blue Fe4 Fe CN 6 3 56 The latter is used as the traditional blue in blueprints 58 Iron is the first of the transition metals that cannot reach its group oxidation state of 8 although its heavier congeners ruthenium and osmium can with ruthenium having more difficulty than osmium 6 Ruthenium exhibits an aqueous cationic chemistry in its low oxidation states similar to that of iron but osmium does not favoring high oxidation states in which it forms anionic complexes 6 In the second half of the 3d transition series vertical similarities down the groups compete with the horizontal similarities of iron with its neighbors cobalt and nickel in the periodic table which are also ferromagnetic at room temperature and share similar chemistry As such iron cobalt and nickel are sometimes grouped together as the iron triad 53 Unlike many other metals iron does not form amalgams with mercury As a result mercury is traded in standardized 76 pound flasks 34 kg made of iron 59 Iron is by far the most reactive element in its group it is pyrophoric when finely divided and dissolves easily in dilute acids giving Fe2 However it does not react with concentrated nitric acid and other oxidizing acids due to the formation of an impervious oxide layer which can nevertheless react with hydrochloric acid 6 High purity iron called electrolytic iron is considered to be resistant to rust due to its oxide layer Binary compounds Oxides and sulfides Ferrous or iron II oxide FeO Ferric or iron III oxide Fe2O3 Ferrosoferric or iron II III oxide Fe3O4 Iron forms various oxide and hydroxide compounds the most common are iron II III oxide Fe3O4 and iron III oxide Fe2O3 Iron II oxide also exists though it is unstable at room temperature Despite their names they are actually all non stoichiometric compounds whose compositions may vary 60 These oxides are the principal ores for the production of iron see bloomery and blast furnace They are also used in the production of ferrites useful magnetic storage media in computers and pigments The best known sulfide is iron pyrite FeS2 also known as fool s gold owing to its golden luster 56 It is not an iron IV compound but is actually an iron II polysulfide containing Fe2 and S2 2 ions in a distorted sodium chloride structure 60 Pourbaix diagram of iron Halides Hydrated iron III chloride ferric chloride The binary ferrous and ferric halides are well known The ferrous halides typically arise from treating iron metal with the corresponding hydrohalic acid to give the corresponding hydrated salts 56 Fe 2 HX FeX2 H2 X F Cl Br I Iron reacts with fluorine chlorine and bromine to give the corresponding ferric halides ferric chloride being the most common 61 2 Fe 3 X2 2 FeX3 X F Cl Br Ferric iodide is an exception being thermodynamically unstable due to the oxidizing power of Fe3 and the high reducing power of I 61 2 I 2 Fe3 I2 2 Fe2 E0 0 23 V Ferric iodide a black solid is not stable in ordinary conditions but can be prepared through the reaction of iron pentacarbonyl with iodine and carbon monoxide in the presence of hexane and light at the temperature of 20 C with oxygen and water excluded 61 Complexes of ferric iodide with some soft bases are known to be stable compounds 62 63 Solution chemistry Comparison of colors of solutions of ferrate left and permanganate right The standard reduction potentials in acidic aqueous solution for some common iron ions are given below 6 Fe H2O 6 2 2 e Fe E0 0 447 V Fe H2O 6 3 e Fe H2O 6 2 E0 0 77 VFeO2 4 8 H3O 3 e Fe H2O 6 3 6 H2O E0 2 20 VThe red purple tetrahedral ferrate VI anion is such a strong oxidizing agent that it oxidizes ammonia to nitrogen N2 and water to oxygen 61 4 FeO2 4 34 H2 O 4 Fe H2O 6 3 20 OH 3 O2The pale violet hexaquo complex Fe H2O 6 3 is an acid such that above pH 0 it is fully hydrolyzed 64 Fe H2O 6 3 Fe H2O 5 OH 2 H K 10 3 05 mol dm 3 Fe H2O 5 OH 2 Fe H2O 4 OH 2 H K 10 3 26 mol dm 32 Fe H2O 6 3 Fe H2O 4 OH 4 2 2H 2H2O K 10 2 91 mol dm 3 Blue green iron II sulfate heptahydrate As pH rises above 0 the above yellow hydrolyzed species form and as it rises above 2 3 reddish brown hydrous iron III oxide precipitates out of solution Although Fe3 has a d5 configuration its absorption spectrum is not like that of Mn2 with its weak spin forbidden d d bands because Fe3 has higher positive charge and is more polarizing lowering the energy of its ligand to metal charge transfer absorptions Thus all the above complexes are rather strongly colored with the single exception of the hexaquo ion and even that has a spectrum dominated by charge transfer in the near ultraviolet region 64 On the other hand the pale green iron II hexaquo ion Fe H2O 6 2 does not undergo appreciable hydrolysis Carbon dioxide is not evolved when carbonate anions are added which instead results in white iron II carbonate being precipitated out In excess carbon dioxide this forms the slightly soluble bicarbonate which occurs commonly in groundwater but it oxidises quickly in air to form iron III oxide that accounts for the brown deposits present in a sizeable number of streams 65 Coordination compounds Due to its electronic structure iron has a very large coordination and organometallic chemistry The two enantiomorphs of the ferrioxalate ion Many coordination compounds of iron are known A typical six coordinate anion is hexachloroferrate III FeCl6 3 found in the mixed salt tetrakis methylammonium hexachloroferrate III chloride 66 67 Complexes with multiple bidentate ligands have geometric isomers For example the trans chlorohydridobis bis 1 2 diphenylphosphino ethane iron II complex is used as a starting material for compounds with the Fe dppe 2 moiety 68 69 The ferrioxalate ion with three oxalate ligands shown at right displays helical chirality with its two non superposable geometries labelled L lambda for the left handed screw axis and D delta for the right handed screw axis in line with IUPAC conventions 64 Potassium ferrioxalate is used in chemical actinometry and along with its sodium salt undergoes photoreduction applied in old style photographic processes The dihydrate of iron II oxalate has a polymeric structure with co planar oxalate ions bridging between iron centres with the water of crystallisation located forming the caps of each octahedron as illustrated below 70 Crystal structure of iron II oxalate dihydrate showing iron gray oxygen red carbon black and hydrogen white atoms Blood red positive thiocyanate test for iron III Iron III complexes are quite similar to those of chromium III with the exception of iron III s preference for O donor instead of N donor ligands The latter tend to be rather more unstable than iron II complexes and often dissociate in water Many Fe O complexes show intense colors and are used as tests for phenols or enols For example in the ferric chloride test used to determine the presence of phenols iron III chloride reacts with a phenol to form a deep violet complex 64 3 ArOH FeCl3 Fe OAr 3 3 HCl Ar aryl Among the halide and pseudohalide complexes fluoro complexes of iron III are the most stable with the colorless FeF5 H2O 2 being the most stable in aqueous solution Chloro complexes are less stable and favor tetrahedral coordination as in FeCl4 FeBr4 and FeI4 are reduced easily to iron II Thiocyanate is a common test for the presence of iron III as it forms the blood red Fe SCN H2O 5 2 Like manganese II most iron III complexes are high spin the exceptions being those with ligands that are high in the spectrochemical series such as cyanide An example of a low spin iron III complex is Fe CN 6 3 Iron shows a great variety of electronic spin states including every possible spin quantum number value for a d block element from 0 diamagnetic to 5 2 5 unpaired electrons This value is always half the number of unpaired electrons Complexes with zero to two unpaired electrons are considered low spin and those with four or five are considered high spin 60 Iron II complexes are less stable than iron III complexes but the preference for O donor ligands is less marked so that for example Fe NH3 6 2 is known while Fe NH3 6 3 is not They have a tendency to be oxidized to iron III but this can be moderated by low pH and the specific ligands used 65 Organometallic compounds Iron penta carbonyl Organoiron chemistry is the study of organometallic compounds of iron where carbon atoms are covalently bound to the metal atom They are many and varied including cyanide complexes carbonyl complexes sandwich and half sandwich compounds Prussian blue Prussian blue or ferric ferrocyanide Fe4 Fe CN 6 3 is an old and well known iron cyanide complex extensively used as pigment and in several other applications Its formation can be used as a simple wet chemistry test to distinguish between aqueous solutions of Fe2 and Fe3 as they react respectively with potassium ferricyanide and potassium ferrocyanide to form Prussian blue 56 Another old example of an organoiron compound is iron pentacarbonyl Fe CO 5 in which a neutral iron atom is bound to the carbon atoms of five carbon monoxide molecules The compound can be used to make carbonyl iron powder a highly reactive form of metallic iron Thermolysis of iron pentacarbonyl gives triiron dodecacarbonyl Fe3 CO 12 a complex with a cluster of three iron atoms at its core Collman s reagent disodium tetracarbonylferrate is a useful reagent for organic chemistry it contains iron in the 2 oxidation state Cyclopentadienyliron dicarbonyl dimer contains iron in the rare 1 oxidation state 71 Structural formula of ferrocene and a powdered sample A landmark in this field was the discovery in 1951 of the remarkably stable sandwich compound ferrocene Fe C5H5 2 by Pauson and Kealy 72 and independently by Miller and colleagues 73 whose surprising molecular structure was determined only a year later by Woodward and Wilkinson 74 and Fischer 75 Ferrocene is still one of the most important tools and models in this class 76 Iron centered organometallic species are used as catalysts The Knolker complex for example is a transfer hydrogenation catalyst for ketones 77 Industrial uses The iron compounds produced on the largest scale in industry are iron II sulfate FeSO4 7H2O and iron III chloride FeCl3 The former is one of the most readily available sources of iron II but is less stable to aerial oxidation than Mohr s salt NH4 2Fe SO4 2 6H2O Iron II compounds tend to be oxidized to iron III compounds in the air 56 HistoryMain article History of ferrous metallurgy Development of iron metallurgy Iron is one of the elements undoubtedly known to the ancient world 78 It has been worked or wrought for millennia However iron artefacts of great age are much rarer than objects made of gold or silver due to the ease with which iron corrodes 79 The technology developed slowly and even after the discovery of smelting it took many centuries for iron to replace bronze as the metal of choice for tools and weapons Meteoritic iron Iron harpoon head from Greenland The iron edge covers a narwhal tusk harpoon using meteorite iron from the Cape York meteorite one of the largest iron meteorites known Beads made from meteoric iron in 3500 BC or earlier were found in Gerzeh Egypt by G A Wainwright 80 The beads contain 7 5 nickel which is a signature of meteoric origin since iron found in the Earth s crust generally has only minuscule nickel impurities Meteoric iron was highly regarded due to its origin in the heavens and was often used to forge weapons and tools 80 For example a dagger made of meteoric iron was found in the tomb of Tutankhamun containing similar proportions of iron cobalt and nickel to a meteorite discovered in the area deposited by an ancient meteor shower 81 82 83 Items that were likely made of iron by Egyptians date from 3000 to 2500 BC 79 Meteoritic iron is comparably soft and ductile and easily cold forged but may get brittle when heated because of the nickel content 84 Wrought iron Main article Wrought iron Further information Ancient iron production The symbol for Mars has been used since antiquity to represent iron The iron pillar of Delhi is an example of the iron extraction and processing methodologies of early India The first iron production started in the Middle Bronze Age but it took several centuries before iron displaced bronze Samples of smelted iron from Asmar Mesopotamia and Tall Chagar Bazaar in northern Syria were made sometime between 3000 and 2700 BC 85 The Hittites established an empire in north central Anatolia around 1600 BC They appear to be the first to understand the production of iron from its ores and regard it highly in their society 86 The Hittites began to smelt iron between 1500 and 1200 BC and the practice spread to the rest of the Near East after their empire fell in 1180 BC 85 The subsequent period is called the Iron Age Artifacts of smelted iron are found in India dating from 1800 to 1200 BC 87 and in the Levant from about 1500 BC suggesting smelting in Anatolia or the Caucasus 88 89 Alleged references compare history of metallurgy in South Asia to iron in the Indian Vedas have been used for claims of a very early usage of iron in India respectively to date the texts as such The rigveda term ayas metal refers to copper while iron which is called as syama ayas literally black copper first is mentioned in the post rigvedic Atharvaveda 90 Some archaeological evidence suggests iron was smelted in Zimbabwe and southeast Africa as early as the eighth century BC 91 Iron working was introduced to Greece in the late 11th century BC from which it spread quickly throughout Europe 92 Iron sickle from Ancient Greece The spread of ironworking in Central and Western Europe is associated with Celtic expansion According to Pliny the Elder iron use was common in the Roman era 80 In the lands of what is now considered China iron appears approximately 700 500 BC 93 Iron smelting may have been introduced into China through Central Asia 94 The earliest evidence of the use of a blast furnace in China dates to the 1st century AD 95 and cupola furnaces were used as early as the Warring States period 403 221 BC 96 Usage of the blast and cupola furnace remained widespread during the Tang and Song dynasties 97 During the Industrial Revolution in Britain Henry Cort began refining iron from pig iron to wrought iron or bar iron using innovative production systems In 1783 he patented the puddling process for refining iron ore It was later improved by others including Joseph Hall 98 Cast iron Main article Cast iron Cast iron was first produced in China during 5th century BC 99 but was hardly in Europe until the medieval period 100 101 The earliest cast iron artifacts were discovered by archaeologists in what is now modern Luhe County Jiangsu in China Cast iron was used in ancient China for warfare agriculture and architecture 102 During the medieval period means were found in Europe of producing wrought iron from cast iron in this context known as pig iron using finery forges For all these processes charcoal was required as fuel 103 Coalbrookdale by Night 1801 Blast furnaces light the iron making town of Coalbrookdale Medieval blast furnaces were about 10 feet 3 0 m tall and made of fireproof brick forced air was usually provided by hand operated bellows 101 Modern blast furnaces have grown much bigger with hearths fourteen meters in diameter that allow them to produce thousands of tons of iron each day but essentially operate in much the same way as they did during medieval times 103 In 1709 Abraham Darby I established a coke fired blast furnace to produce cast iron replacing charcoal although continuing to use blast furnaces The ensuing availability of inexpensive iron was one of the factors leading to the Industrial Revolution Toward the end of the 18th century cast iron began to replace wrought iron for certain purposes because it was cheaper Carbon content in iron was not implicated as the reason for the differences in properties of wrought iron cast iron and steel until the 18th century 85 Since iron was becoming cheaper and more plentiful it also became a major structural material following the building of the innovative first iron bridge in 1778 This bridge still stands today as a monument to the role iron played in the Industrial Revolution Following this iron was used in rails boats ships aqueducts and buildings as well as in iron cylinders in steam engines 103 Railways have been central to the formation of modernity and ideas of progress 104 and various languages refer to railways as iron road e g French chemin de fer German Eisenbahn Turkish demiryolu Russian zheleznaya doroga Chinese Japanese and Korean 鐵道 Vietnamese đường sắt Steel Main article Steel See also Steelmaking Steel with smaller carbon content than pig iron but more than wrought iron was first produced in antiquity by using a bloomery Blacksmiths in Luristan in western Persia were making good steel by 1000 BC 85 Then improved versions Wootz steel by India and Damascus steel were developed around 300 BC and AD 500 respectively These methods were specialized and so steel did not become a major commodity until the 1850s 105 New methods of producing it by carburizing bars of iron in the cementation process were devised in the 17th century In the Industrial Revolution new methods of producing bar iron without charcoal were devised and these were later applied to produce steel In the late 1850s Henry Bessemer invented a new steelmaking process involving blowing air through molten pig iron to produce mild steel This made steel much more economical thereby leading to wrought iron no longer being produced in large quantities 106 Foundations of modern chemistry In 1774 Antoine Lavoisier used the reaction of water steam with metallic iron inside an incandescent iron tube to produce hydrogen in his experiments leading to the demonstration of the conservation of mass which was instrumental in changing chemistry from a qualitative science to a quantitative one 107 Symbolic role Gold gab ich fur Eisen I gave gold for iron German American brooch from WWI Iron plays a certain role in mythology and has found various usage as a metaphor and in folklore The Greek poet Hesiod s Works and Days lines 109 201 lists different ages of man named after metals like gold silver bronze and iron to account for successive ages of humanity 108 The Iron Age was closely related with Rome and in Ovid s Metamorphoses The Virtues in despair quit the earth and the depravity of man becomes universal and complete Hard steel succeeded then Ovid Metamorphoses Book I Iron age line 160 ff An example of the importance of iron s symbolic role may be found in the German Campaign of 1813 Frederick William III commissioned then the first Iron Cross as military decoration Berlin iron jewellery reached its peak production between 1813 and 1815 when the Prussian royal family urged citizens to donate gold and silver jewellery for military funding The inscription Gold gab ich fur Eisen I gave gold for iron was used as well in later war efforts 109 Production of metallic iron Iron powder Iron furnace in Columbus Ohio 1922 Laboratory routes For a few limited purposes when it is needed pure iron is produced in the laboratory in small quantities by reducing the pure oxide or hydroxide with hydrogen or forming iron pentacarbonyl and heating it to 250 C so that it decomposes to form pure iron powder 41 Another method is electrolysis of ferrous chloride onto an iron cathode 110 Main industrial route See also Iron ore Iron production 2009 million tonnes 111 dubious discuss Country Iron ore Pig iron Direct iron Steel China 1 114 9 549 4 573 6 Australia 393 9 4 4 5 2 Brazil 305 0 25 1 0 011 26 5 Japan 66 9 87 5 India 257 4 38 2 23 4 63 5 Russia 92 1 43 9 4 7 60 0 Ukraine 65 8 25 7 29 9 South Korea 0 1 27 3 48 6 Germany 0 4 20 1 0 38 32 7World 1 594 9 914 0 64 5 1 232 4Nowadays the industrial production of iron or steel consists of two main stages In the first stage iron ore is reduced with coke in a blast furnace and the molten metal is separated from gross impurities such as silicate minerals This stage yields an alloy pig iron that contains relatively large amounts of carbon In the second stage the amount of carbon in the pig iron is lowered by oxidation to yield wrought iron steel or cast iron 112 Other metals can be added at this stage to form alloy steels 17th century Chinese illustration of workers at a blast furnace making wrought iron from pig iron 113 How iron was extracted in the 19th century Blast furnace processing Main article Blast furnace The blast furnace is loaded with iron ores usually hematite Fe2O3 or magnetite Fe3O4 along with coke coal that has been separately baked to remove volatile components and flux limestone or dolomite Blasts of air pre heated to 900 C sometimes with oxygen enrichment is blown through the mixture in sufficient amount to turn the carbon into carbon monoxide 112 2 C O 2 2 CO displaystyle ce 2 C O2 gt 2 CO This reaction raises the temperature to about 2000 C The carbon monoxide reduces the iron ore to metallic iron 112 Fe 2 O 3 3 CO 2 Fe 3 CO 2 displaystyle ce Fe2O3 3 CO gt 2 Fe 3 CO2 Some iron in the high temperature lower region of the furnace reacts directly with the coke 112 2 Fe 2 O 3 3 C 4 Fe 3 CO 2 displaystyle ce 2Fe2O3 3C gt 4Fe 3CO2 The flux removes silicaceous minerals in the ore which would otherwise clog the furnace The heat of the furnace decomposes the carbonates to calcium oxide which reacts with any excess silica to form a slag composed of calcium silicate CaSiO3 or other products At the furnace s temperature the metal and the slag are both molten They collect at the bottom as two immiscible liquid layers with the slag on top that are then easily separated 112 The slag can be used as a material in road construction or to improve mineral poor soils for agriculture 101 Steelmaking thus remains one of the largest industrial contributors of CO2 emissions in the world 114 This heap of iron ore pellets will be used in steel production Steelmaking Main articles Steelmaking and Ironworks A pot of molten iron being used to make steel The pig iron produced by the blast furnace process contains up to 4 5 carbon by mass with small amounts of other impurities like sulfur magnesium phosphorus and manganese This high level of carbon makes it relatively weak and brittle Reducing the amount of carbon to 0 002 2 1 produces steel which may be up to 1000 times harder than pure iron A great variety of steel articles can then be made by cold working hot rolling forging machining etc Removing the impurities from pig iron but leaving 2 4 carbon results in cast iron which is cast by foundries into articles such as stoves pipes radiators lamp posts and rails 112 Steel products often undergo various heat treatments after they are forged to shape Annealing consists of heating them to 700 800 C for several hours and then gradual cooling It makes the steel softer and more workable 115 Direct iron reduction Owing to environmental concerns alternative methods of processing iron have been developed Direct iron reduction reduces iron ore to a ferrous lump called sponge iron or direct iron that is suitable for steelmaking 101 Two main reactions comprise the direct reduction process Natural gas is partially oxidized with heat and a catalyst 101 2 CH 4 O 2 2 CO 4 H 2 displaystyle ce 2 CH4 O2 gt 2 CO 4 H2 Iron ore is then treated with these gases in a furnace producing solid sponge iron 101 Fe 2 O 3 CO 2 H 2 2 Fe CO 2 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce Fe2O3 CO 2 H2 gt 2 Fe CO2 2 H2O Silica is removed by adding a limestone flux as described above 101 Thermite process Main article Thermite Ignition of a mixture of aluminium powder and iron oxide yields metallic iron via the thermite reaction Fe 2 O 3 2 Al 2 Fe Al 2 O 3 displaystyle ce Fe2O3 2 Al gt 2 Fe Al2O3 Alternatively pig iron may be made into steel with up to about 2 carbon or wrought iron commercially pure iron Various processes have been used for this including finery forges puddling furnaces Bessemer converters open hearth furnaces basic oxygen furnaces and electric arc furnaces In all cases the objective is to oxidize some or all of the carbon together with other impurities On the other hand other metals may be added to make alloy steels 103 ApplicationsAs structural material Iron is the most widely used of all the metals accounting for over 90 of worldwide metal production Its low cost and high strength often make it the material of choice to withstand stress or transmit forces such as the construction of machinery and machine tools rails automobiles ship hulls concrete reinforcing bars and the load carrying framework of buildings Since pure iron is quite soft it is most commonly combined with alloying elements to make steel 116 Mechanical properties Characteristic values of tensile strength TS and Brinell hardness BH of various forms of iron 117 118 Material TS MPa BH Brinell Iron whiskers 11000Ausformed hardened steel 2930 850 1200Martensitic steel 2070 600Bainitic steel 1380 400Pearlitic steel 1200 350Cold worked iron 690 200Small grain iron 340 100Carbon containing iron 140 40Pure single crystal iron 10 3The mechanical properties of iron and its alloys are extremely relevant to their structural applications Those properties can be evaluated in various ways including the Brinell test the Rockwell test and the Vickers hardness test The properties of pure iron are often used to calibrate measurements or to compare tests 118 119 However the mechanical properties of iron are significantly affected by the sample s purity pure single crystals of iron are actually softer than aluminium 117 and the purest industrially produced iron 99 99 has a hardness of 20 30 Brinell 120 The pure iron 99 9 99 999 especially called electrolytic iron is industrially produced by electrolytic refining An increase in the carbon content will cause a significant increase in the hardness and tensile strength of iron Maximum hardness of 65 Rc is achieved with a 0 6 carbon content although the alloy has low tensile strength 121 Because of the softness of iron it is much easier to work with than its heavier congeners ruthenium and osmium 12 Iron carbon phase diagram Types of steels and alloys See also Steel a Iron is a fairly soft metal that can dissolve only a small concentration of carbon no more than 0 021 by mass at 910 C 122 Austenite g iron is similarly soft and metallic but can dissolve considerably more carbon as much as 2 04 by mass at 1146 C This form of iron is used in the type of stainless steel used for making cutlery and hospital and food service equipment 16 Commercially available iron is classified based on purity and the abundance of additives Pig iron has 3 5 4 5 carbon 123 and contains varying amounts of contaminants such as sulfur silicon and phosphorus Pig iron is not a saleable product but rather an intermediate step in the production of cast iron and steel The reduction of contaminants in pig iron that negatively affect material properties such as sulfur and phosphorus yields cast iron containing 2 4 carbon 1 6 silicon and small amounts of manganese 112 Pig iron has a melting point in the range of 1420 1470 K which is lower than either of its two main components and makes it the first product to be melted when carbon and iron are heated together 6 Its mechanical properties vary greatly and depend on the form the carbon takes in the alloy 12 White cast irons contain their carbon in the form of cementite or iron carbide Fe3C 12 This hard brittle compound dominates the mechanical properties of white cast irons rendering them hard but unresistant to shock The broken surface of a white cast iron is full of fine facets of the broken iron carbide a very pale silvery shiny material hence the appellation Cooling a mixture of iron with 0 8 carbon slowly below 723 C to room temperature results in separate alternating layers of cementite and a iron which is soft and malleable and is called pearlite for its appearance Rapid cooling on the other hand does not allow time for this separation and creates hard and brittle martensite The steel can then be tempered by reheating to a temperature in between changing the proportions of pearlite and martensite The end product below 0 8 carbon content is a pearlite aFe mixture and that above 0 8 carbon content is a pearlite cementite mixture 12 In gray iron the carbon exists as separate fine flakes of graphite and also renders the material brittle due to the sharp edged flakes of graphite that produce stress concentration sites within the material 124 A newer variant of gray iron referred to as ductile iron is specially treated with trace amounts of magnesium to alter the shape of graphite to spheroids or nodules reducing the stress concentrations and vastly increasing the toughness and strength of the material 124 Wrought iron contains less than 0 25 carbon but large amounts of slag that give it a fibrous characteristic 123 It is a tough malleable product but not as fusible as pig iron If honed to an edge it loses it quickly Wrought iron is characterized by the presence of fine fibers of slag entrapped within the metal Wrought iron is more corrosion resistant than steel It has been almost completely replaced by mild steel for traditional wrought iron products and blacksmithing Mild steel corrodes more readily than wrought iron but is cheaper and more widely available Carbon steel contains 2 0 carbon or less 125 with small amounts of manganese sulfur phosphorus and silicon Alloy steels contain varying amounts of carbon as well as other metals such as chromium vanadium molybdenum nickel tungsten etc Their alloy content raises their cost and so they are usually only employed for specialist uses One common alloy steel though is stainless steel Recent developments in ferrous metallurgy have produced a growing range of microalloyed steels also termed HSLA or high strength low alloy steels containing tiny additions to produce high strengths and often spectacular toughness at minimal cost 125 126 127 Photon mass attenuation coefficient for iron Alloys with high purity elemental makeups such as alloys of electrolytic iron have specifically enhanced properties such as ductility tensile strength toughness fatigue strength heat resistance and corrosion resistance Apart from traditional applications iron is also used for protection from ionizing radiation Although it is lighter than another traditional protection material lead it is much stronger mechanically The attenuation of radiation as a function of energy is shown in the graph 128 The main disadvantage of iron and steel is that pure iron and most of its alloys suffer badly from rust if not protected in some way a cost amounting to over 1 of the world s economy 129 Painting galvanization passivation plastic coating and bluing are all used to protect iron from rust by excluding water and oxygen or by cathodic protection The mechanism of the rusting of iron is as follows 129 Cathode 3 O2 6 H2O 12 e 12 OH Anode 4 Fe 4 Fe2 8 e 4 Fe2 4 Fe3 4 e Overall 4 Fe 3 O2 6 H2O 4 Fe3 12 OH 4 Fe OH 3 or 4 FeO OH 4 H2OThe electrolyte is usually iron II sulfate in urban areas formed when atmospheric sulfur dioxide attacks iron and salt particles in the atmosphere in seaside areas 129 Catalysts and reagents Because Fe is inexpensive and nontoxic much effort has been devoted to the development of Fe based catalysts and reagents Iron is however less common as a catalyst in commercial processes than more expensive metals 130 In biology Fe containing enzymes are pervasive 131 Iron catalysts are traditionally used in the Haber Bosch process for the production of ammonia and the Fischer Tropsch process for conversion of carbon monoxide to hydrocarbons for fuels and lubricants 132 Powdered iron in an acidic medium is used in the Bechamp reduction the conversion of nitrobenzene to aniline 133 Iron compounds Iron III oxide mixed with aluminium powder can be ignited to create a thermite reaction used in welding large iron parts like rails and purifying ores Iron III oxide and oxyhydroxide are used as reddish and ocher pigments Iron III chloride finds use in water purification and sewage treatment in the dyeing of cloth as a coloring agent in paints as an additive in animal feed and as an etchant for copper in the manufacture of printed circuit boards 134 It can also be dissolved in alcohol to form tincture of iron which is used as a medicine to stop bleeding in canaries 135 Iron II sulfate is used as a precursor to other iron compounds It is also used to reduce chromate in cement It is used to fortify foods and treat iron deficiency anemia Iron III sulfate is used in settling minute sewage particles in tank water Iron II chloride is used as a reducing flocculating agent in the formation of iron complexes and magnetic iron oxides and as a reducing agent in organic synthesis 134 Sodium nitroprusside is a drug used as a vasodilator It is on the World Health Organization s List of Essential Medicines 136 Biological and pathological roleMain article Iron in biology Iron is required for life 5 137 138 The iron sulfur clusters are pervasive and include nitrogenase the enzymes responsible for biological nitrogen fixation Iron containing proteins participate in transport storage and use of oxygen 5 Iron proteins are involved in electron transfer 139 Simplified structure of Heme b in the protein additional ligand s are attached to Fe Examples of iron containing proteins in higher organisms include hemoglobin cytochrome see high valent iron and catalase 5 140 The average adult human contains about 0 005 body weight of iron or about four grams of which three quarters is in hemoglobin a level that remains constant despite only about one milligram of iron being absorbed each day 139 because the human body recycles its hemoglobin for the iron content 141 Microbial growth may be assisted by oxidation of iron II or by reduction of iron III 142 Biochemistry Iron acquisition poses a problem for aerobic organisms because ferric iron is poorly soluble near neutral pH Thus these organisms have developed means to absorb iron as complexes sometimes taking up ferrous iron before oxidising it back to ferric iron 5 In particular bacteria have evolved very high affinity sequestering agents called siderophores 143 144 145 After uptake in human cells iron storage is precisely regulated 5 146 A major component of this regulation is the protein transferrin which binds iron ions absorbed from the duodenum and carries it in the blood to cells 5 147 Transferrin contains Fe3 in the middle of a distorted octahedron bonded to one nitrogen three oxygens and a chelating carbonate anion that traps the Fe3 ion it has such a high stability constant that it is very effective at taking up Fe3 ions even from the most stable complexes At the bone marrow transferrin is reduced from Fe3 and Fe2 and stored as ferritin to be incorporated into hemoglobin 139 The most commonly known and studied bioinorganic iron compounds biological iron molecules are the heme proteins examples are hemoglobin myoglobin and cytochrome P450 5 These compounds participate in transporting gases building enzymes and transferring electrons 139 Metalloproteins are a group of proteins with metal ion cofactors Some examples of iron metalloproteins are ferritin and rubredoxin 139 Many enzymes vital to life contain iron such as catalase 148 lipoxygenases 149 and IRE BP 150 Hemoglobin is an oxygen carrier that occurs in red blood cells and contributes their color transporting oxygen in the arteries from the lungs to the muscles where it is transferred to myoglobin which stores it until it is needed for the metabolic oxidation of glucose generating energy 5 Here the hemoglobin binds to carbon dioxide produced when glucose is oxidized which is transported through the veins by hemoglobin predominantly as bicarbonate anions back to the lungs where it is exhaled 139 In hemoglobin the iron is in one of four heme groups and has six possible coordination sites four are occupied by nitrogen atoms in a porphyrin ring the fifth by an imidazole nitrogen in a histidine residue of one of the protein chains attached to the heme group and the sixth is reserved for the oxygen molecule it can reversibly bind to 139 When hemoglobin is not attached to oxygen and is then called deoxyhemoglobin the Fe2 ion at the center of the heme group in the hydrophobic protein interior is in a high spin configuration It is thus too large to fit inside the porphyrin ring which bends instead into a dome with the Fe2 ion about 55 picometers above it In this configuration the sixth coordination site reserved for the oxygen is blocked by another histidine residue 139 When deoxyhemoglobin picks up an oxygen molecule this histidine residue moves away and returns once the oxygen is securely attached to form a hydrogen bond with it This results in the Fe2 ion switching to a low spin configuration resulting in a 20 decrease in ionic radius so that now it can fit into the porphyrin ring which becomes planar 139 Additionally this hydrogen bonding results in the tilting of the oxygen molecule resulting in a Fe O O bond angle of around 120 that avoids the formation of Fe O Fe or Fe O2 Fe bridges that would lead to electron transfer the oxidation of Fe2 to Fe3 and the destruction of hemoglobin This results in a movement of all the protein chains that leads to the other subunits of hemoglobin changing shape to a form with larger oxygen affinity Thus when deoxyhemoglobin takes up oxygen its affinity for more oxygen increases and vice versa 139 Myoglobin on the other hand contains only one heme group and hence this cooperative effect cannot occur Thus while hemoglobin is almost saturated with oxygen in the high partial pressures of oxygen found in the lungs its affinity for oxygen is much lower than that of myoglobin which oxygenates even at low partial pressures of oxygen found in muscle tissue 139 As described by the Bohr effect named after Christian Bohr the father of Niels Bohr the oxygen affinity of hemoglobin diminishes in the presence of carbon dioxide 139 A heme unit of human carboxyhemoglobin showing the carbonyl ligand at the apical position trans to the histidine residue 151 Carbon monoxide and phosphorus trifluoride are poisonous to humans because they bind to hemoglobin similarly to oxygen but with much more strength so that oxygen can no longer be transported throughout the body Hemoglobin bound to carbon monoxide is known as carboxyhemoglobin This effect also plays a minor role in the toxicity of cyanide but there the major effect is by far its interference with the proper functioning of the electron transport protein cytochrome a 139 The cytochrome proteins also involve heme groups and are involved in the metabolic oxidation of glucose by oxygen The sixth coordination site is then occupied by either another imidazole nitrogen or a methionine sulfur so that these proteins are largely inert to oxygen with the exception of cytochrome a which bonds directly to oxygen and thus is very easily poisoned by cyanide 139 Here the electron transfer takes place as the iron remains in low spin but changes between the 2 and 3 oxidation states Since the reduction potential of each step is slightly greater than the previous one the energy is released step by step and can thus be stored in adenosine triphosphate Cytochrome a is slightly distinct as it occurs at the mitochondrial membrane binds directly to oxygen and transports protons as well as electrons as follows 139 4 Cytc2 O2 8H inside 4 Cytc3 2 H2O 4H outsideAlthough the heme proteins are the most important class of iron containing proteins the iron sulfur proteins are also very important being involved in electron transfer which is possible since iron can exist stably in either the 2 or 3 oxidation states These have one two four or eight iron atoms that are each approximately tetrahedrally coordinated to four sulfur atoms because of this tetrahedral coordination they always have high spin iron The simplest of such compounds is rubredoxin which has only one iron atom coordinated to four sulfur atoms from cysteine residues in the surrounding peptide chains Another important class of iron sulfur proteins is the ferredoxins which have multiple iron atoms Transferrin does not belong to either of these classes 139 The ability of sea mussels to maintain their grip on rocks in the ocean is facilitated by their use of organometallic iron based bonds in their protein rich cuticles Based on synthetic replicas the presence of iron in these structures increased elastic modulus 770 times tensile strength 58 times and toughness 92 times The amount of stress required to permanently damage them increased 76 times 152 Nutrition Diet Iron is pervasive but particularly rich sources of dietary iron include red meat oysters beans poultry fish leaf vegetables watercress tofu and blackstrap molasses 5 Bread and breakfast cereals are sometimes specifically fortified with iron 5 153 Iron provided by dietary supplements is often found as iron II fumarate although iron II sulfate is cheaper and is absorbed equally well 134 Elemental iron or reduced iron despite being absorbed at only one third to two thirds the efficiency relative to iron sulfate 154 is often added to foods such as breakfast cereals or enriched wheat flour Iron is most available to the body when chelated to amino acids 155 and is also available for use as a common iron supplement Glycine the least expensive amino acid is most often used to produce iron glycinate supplements 156 Dietary recommendations The U S Institute of Medicine IOM updated Estimated Average Requirements EARs and Recommended Dietary Allowances RDAs for iron in 2001 5 The current EAR for iron for women ages 14 18 is 7 9 mg day 8 1 for ages 19 50 and 5 0 thereafter post menopause For men the EAR is 6 0 mg day for ages 19 and up The RDA is 15 0 mg day for women ages 15 18 18 0 for 19 50 and 8 0 thereafter For men 8 0 mg day for ages 19 and up RDAs are higher than EARs so as to identify amounts that will cover people with higher than average requirements RDA for pregnancy is 27 mg day and for lactation 9 mg day 5 For children ages 1 3 years 7 mg day 10 for ages 4 8 and 8 for ages 9 13 As for safety the IOM also sets Tolerable upper intake levels ULs for vitamins and minerals when evidence is sufficient In the case of iron the UL is set at 45 mg day Collectively the EARs RDAs and ULs are referred to as Dietary Reference Intakes 157 The European Food Safety Authority EFSA refers to the collective set of information as Dietary Reference Values with Population Reference Intake PRI instead of RDA and Average Requirement instead of EAR AI and UL defined the same as in United States For women the PRI is 13 mg day ages 15 17 years 16 mg day for women ages 18 and up who are premenopausal and 11 mg day postmenopausal For pregnancy and lactation 16 mg day For men the PRI is 11 mg day ages 15 and older For children ages 1 to 14 the PRI increases from 7 to 11 mg day The PRIs are higher than the U S RDAs with the exception of pregnancy 158 The EFSA reviewed the same safety question did not establish a UL 159 Infants may require iron supplements if they are bottle fed cow s milk 160 Frequent blood donors are at risk of low iron levels and are often advised to supplement their iron intake 161 For U S food and dietary supplement labeling purposes the amount in a serving is expressed as a percent of Daily Value DV For iron labeling purposes 100 of the Daily Value was 18 mg and as of May 27 2016 update remained unchanged at 18 mg 162 163 A table of the old and new adult daily values is provided at Reference Daily Intake Deficiency Main article Iron deficiency Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in the world 5 164 165 166 When loss of iron is not adequately compensated by adequate dietary iron intake a state of latent iron deficiency occurs which over time leads to iron deficiency anemia if left untreated which is characterised by an insufficient number of red blood cells and an insufficient amount of hemoglobin 167 Children pre menopausal women women of child bearing age and people with poor diet are most susceptible to the disease Most cases of iron deficiency anemia are mild but if not treated can cause problems like fast or irregular heartbeat complications during pregnancy and delayed growth in infants and children 168 Excess Main article Iron overload Iron uptake is tightly regulated by the human body which has no regulated physiological means of excreting iron Only small amounts of iron are lost daily due to mucosal and skin epithelial cell sloughing so control of iron levels is primarily accomplished by regulating uptake 169 Regulation of iron uptake is impaired in some people as a result of a genetic defect that maps to the HLA H gene region on chromosome 6 and leads to abnormally low levels of hepcidin a key regulator of the entry of iron into the circulatory system in mammals 170 In these people excessive iron intake can result in iron overload disorders known medically as hemochromatosis 5 Many people have an undiagnosed genetic susceptibility to iron overload and are not aware of a family history of the problem For this reason people should not take iron supplements unless they suffer from iron deficiency and have consulted a doctor Hemochromatosis is estimated to be the cause of 0 3 to 0 8 of all metabolic diseases of Caucasians 171 Overdoses of ingested iron can cause excessive levels of free iron in the blood High blood levels of free ferrous iron react with peroxides to produce highly reactive free radicals that can damage DNA proteins lipids and other cellular components Iron toxicity occurs when the cell contains free iron which generally occurs when iron levels exceed the availability of transferrin to bind the iron Damage to the cells of the gastrointestinal tract can also prevent them from regulating iron absorption leading to further increases in blood levels Iron typically damages cells in the heart liver and elsewhere causing adverse effects that include coma metabolic acidosis shock liver failure coagulopathy long term organ damage and even death 172 Humans experience iron toxicity when the iron exceeds 20 milligrams for every kilogram of body mass 60 milligrams per kilogram is considered a lethal dose 173 Overconsumption of iron often the result of children eating large quantities of ferrous sulfate tablets intended for adult consumption is one of the most common toxicological causes of death in children under six 173 The Dietary Reference Intake DRI sets the Tolerable Upper Intake Level UL for adults at 45 mg day For children under fourteen years old the UL is 40 mg day 174 The medical management of iron toxicity is complicated and can include use of a specific chelating agent called deferoxamine to bind and expel excess iron from the body 172 175 176 ADHD Some research has suggested that low thalamic iron levels may play a role in the pathophysiology of ADHD 177 Some researchers have found that iron supplementation can be effective especially in the inattentive subtype of the disorder 178 One study also showed that iron may be able to decrease the risk of cardiovascular events during treatment with ADHD drugs 179 Some researchers in the 2000s suggested a link between low levels of iron in the blood and ADHD A 2012 study found no such correlation 180 Cancer The role of iron in cancer defense can be described as a double edged sword because of its pervasive presence in non pathological processes 181 People having chemotherapy may develop iron deficiency and anemia for which intravenous iron therapy is used to restore iron levels 182 Iron overload which may occur from high consumption of red meat 5 may initiate tumor growth and increase susceptibility to cancer onset 182 particularly for colorectal cancer 5 Marine systems Iron plays an essential role in marine systems and can act as a limiting nutrient for planktonic activity 183 Because of this too much of a decrease in iron may lead to a decrease in growth rates in phytoplanktonic organisms such as diatoms 184 Iron can also be oxidized by marine microbes under conditions that are high in iron and low in oxygen 185 Iron can enter marine systems through adjoining rivers and directly from the atmosphere Once iron enters the ocean it can be distributed throughout the water column through ocean mixing and through recycling on the cellular level 186 In the arctic sea ice plays a major role in the store and distribution of iron in the ocean depleting oceanic iron as it freezes in the winter and releasing it back into the water when thawing occurs in the summer 187 The iron cycle can 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review Critical Reviews in Oncology Hematology 89 1 1 15 doi 10 1016 j critrevonc 2013 10 008 PMID 24275533 Morel F M M Hudson R J M amp Price N M 1991 Limitation of productivity by trace metals in the sea Limnology and Oceanography 36 8 1742 1755 doi 10 4319 lo 1991 36 8 1742 Brezezinski M A Baines S B Balch W M Beucher C P Chai F Dugdale R C Krause J W Landry M R Marchi A Measures C I Nelson D M Parker A E Poulton A J Selph K E Strutton P G Taylor A G amp Twining B S 2011 Co limitation of diatoms by iron and silicic acid in the equatorial Pacific Deep Sea Research Part II Topical Studies in Oceanography 58 3 4 493 511 doi 10 1016 j dsr2 2010 08 005 Field E K Kato S Findlay A J MacDonald D J Chiu B K Luther G W amp Chan C S 2016 Planktonic marine iron oxidizers drive iron mineralization under low oxygen conditions Geobiology 14 5 499 508 doi 10 1111 gbi 12189 Wells M L Price N M amp Bruland K W 1995 Iron chemistry in seawater and its relationship to phytoplankton a workshop report Marine Chemistry 48 2 157 182 doi 10 1016 0304 4203 94 00055 I Lannuzel D Vancoppenolle M van der Merwe P de Jong J Meiners K M Grotti M Nishioska J amp Schoemann 2016 Iron in sea ice Review and new insights Elementa Science of the Anthropocene 4 000130 doi 10 12952 journal elementa 000130 Raiswell R 2011 Iron Transport from the Continents to the Open Ocean The Aging Rejuvenation Cycle Elements 7 2 101 106 doi 10 2113 gselements 7 2 101 Tagliabue A Bopp L Aumont O amp Arrigo K R 2009 Influence of light and temperature on the marine iron cycle From theoretical to global modeling Global Biogeochemical Cycles 23 doi 10 1029 2008GB003214BibliographyGreenwood Norman N Earnshaw Alan 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 08 037941 8 Weeks Mary Elvira Leichester Henry M 1968 Elements known to the ancients Discovery of the elements Easton PA Journal of Chemical Education pp 29 40 ISBN 0 7661 3872 0 LCCN 68 15217 Further readingH R Schubert History of the British Iron and Steel Industry to 1775 AD Routledge London 1957 R F Tylecote History of Metallurgy Institute of Materials London 1992 R F Tylecote Iron in the Industrial Revolution in J Day and R F Tylecote The Industrial Revolution in Metals Institute of Materials 1991 200 60 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Iron Look up iron in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iron Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Iron It s Elemental Iron Iron at The Periodic Table of Videos University of Nottingham Metallurgy for the non Metallurgist Iron by J B Calvert Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iron amp oldid 1137824066, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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