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  1. Iron (II) sulfate heptahydrate is used as a precursor to prepare other iron compounds such as a lawn conditioner and a mordant for wool dyeing. It is actively used in the manufacture of ink including iron gall ink. As a reducing agent, it participates in the reduction of chromate in cement. It is also used in industrial water treatment plants ...

  2. Iron(II) sulfate heptahydrate is a hydrated iron(II) salt. It undergoes thermal degradation to afford hydrosulfate and oxysulfate of iron(III). [1] Isothermal and dynamic thermal analysis methods have been proposed to study its thermal decomposition in air.

  3. Iron helps blood to carry oxygen through the human body. Colorant Ferrous sulfate was used in the manufacture of inks, most notably iron gall ink, which was used during the Middle Ages until the end of the eighteenth century. Chemical tests made on the Lachish letters (c.588–586 BCE) showed the possible presence of iron. Moreover, it is ...

  4. Description. Iron (2+) sulfate heptahydrate is a hydrate that is the heptahydrate form of iron (2+) sulfate. It is used as a source of iron in the treatment of iron -deficiency anaemia (generally in liquid-dosage treatments; for solid-dosage treatments, the monohydrate is normally used). It has a role as a nutraceutical, an anti-anaemic agent ...

  5. CHEBI:75832 - iron (2+) sulfate (anhydrous) A compound of iron and sulfate in which the ratio of iron (2+) to sulfate ions is 1:1. Various hydrates occur naturally - most commonly the heptahydrate, which loses water to form the tetrahydrate at 57°C and the monohydrate at 65°C. This entity has been manually annotated by the ChEBI Team.

  6. Word Equation. Iron(Ii) Sulfate + Sodium Hydroxide = Ferrous Hydroxide + Sodium Sulfate. FeSO4 + NaOH = Fe(OH)2 + Na2SO4 is a Double Displacement (Metathesis) reaction where one mole of aqueous Iron(Ii) Sulfate [FeSO 4] and two moles of aqueous Sodium Hydroxide [NaOH] react to form one mole of solid Ferrous Hydroxide [Fe(OH) 2] and one mole of aqueous Sodium Sulfate [Na 2 SO 4]

  7. All the iron (II) sulfates dissolve in water to give the same aquo complex [Fe (H2O)6]2+, which has octahedral molecular geometry and is paramagnetic. The name copperas dates from times when the copper (II) sulfate was known as blue copperas, and perhaps in analogy, iron (II) and zinc sulfate were known respectively as green and white copperas.