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Iron structural properties

Since buried pipes for water, sewage and gas are a major use of cast iron, the corrosion of buried iron structures needs special consideration in any study of the corrosion properties of cast iron. It is also a very complex topic that is not fully understood. [Pg.592]

The peritectic transformation generally has little effect on the structure, properties or corrosion resistance of steels at room temperature an exception to this occurs in the welding of certain steels, when 6-ferrite can be retained at room temperature and can affect corrosion resistance. Furthermore, since most steels contain less than about 1 -0 oC (and by far the greatest tonnage contains less than about 0-3%C) the eutectic reaction is of relevance only in relation to the structure and properties of cast irons, which generally contain 2-4%C. This discussion, therefore, will be limited to the eutectoid reaction that occurs when homogeneous austenite is cooled. [Pg.1281]

Much research focuses on the structures, properties, and uses of the complexes formed between d-metal ions acting as Lewis acids and a variety of Lewis bases, partly because they participate in many biological reactions. Hemoglobin and vitamin B12, for example, are both complexes—the former of iron and the latter of cobalt (Box 16.1). Complexes of the d-metals are often brightly colored and magnetic and are used in chemistry for analysis, to dissolve ions (Section 11.13), in the... [Pg.788]

The previous chapters are exclusively devoted to the measurements and interpretation of Fe spectra of various iron-containing systems. Iron is, by far, the most extensively explored element in the field of chemistry compared with all other Mdssbauer-active elements because the Mossbauer effect of Fe is very easy to observe and the spectra are, in general, well resolved and they reflect important information about bonding and structural properties. Besides iron, there are a good number of other transition metals suitable for Mossbauer spectroscopy which is, however, less extensively studied because of technical and/or spectral resolution problems. In recent years, many of these difficulties have been overcome, and we shall see in the following sections a good deal of successful Mossbauer spectroscopy that has been performed on compounds of... [Pg.235]

Cornell, R.M. Schwertmann, U. 2003. The iron oxides Structure, properties, reactions, occurrences, and uses. Wiley-VCH. [Pg.337]

In summary, the results of this investigation indicated that the formal oxidation of the nickel sites in a composite nickel-iron oxyhydroxide modifies the electronic and structural properties of the ferric sites yielding a more d-electron deficient iron species. Although it may be reasonable to suggest that the elec-trocatalytic activity of this composite oxide for oxygen evolution may be related to the presence of such highly oxidized iron sites,... [Pg.270]

Cornell RM, Schwertmann U (1996) The iron oxides structure, properties, reaction, occurrence and uses. VCH, Weinheim, Germany... [Pg.403]

Cornell, R. M. Schwertmann, U. The Iron Oxides Structure, Properties, Reactions, Occurrence and Uses 1996, VCH Weinheim. [Pg.544]

Chiarizia, R. Horwitz, E.P. (1991) New formulations for iron oxides dissolution. Hydrometallurgy 27 339-360 Childs, C.W Wilson, A.D. (1983) Iron oxide minerals in soils of the Ha apai Group, Kingdom of Tonga. Aust. J. Soil Res. 21 489-503 Childs, C.W. (1992) Ferrihydrite A review of structure, properties and occurrence in relation to soils. Z. Pflanzenemahr. Bodenk. 155 441-448... [Pg.568]

In addition to their varied biological roles, non-heme iron proteins contain a magnificent assortment of iron sites having a multitude of chemical and structural properties. Indeed, the catalog of iron centers is a bit like the taxonomy of insects—a seemingly limitless variation of a few structural themes, yet each new form sufficiently different to define a new species. It is beyond the scope of any review of non-heme iron proteins to be inclusive, and there are excellent recent reviews which detail selected topics. Rather, it is our intention to provide in one chapter an overview of the major classes with an emphasis on proteins for which a crystal structure is available. This review begins with a survey of the types of protein iron structures and a discussion of some methods and problems associated with establishing the iron center type. This should provide an introduction to readers less familiar with the area. Sections II to IV include the current status and recent developments for a limited number of proteins from the major iron classes. These have been chosen in the subjective vein of a limited review the omission of a topic does not indicate its relative importance or interest, only the limitation of space. The purpose of this section is to emphasize the diversity of iron center structures and functions. [Pg.200]

Although low-resolution difference Fourier maps for oxy-Hr and deoxy-Hr show little change in the protein structures, some of the iron center properties are significantly altered in deoxy-Hr. The differences provide a rationale for an oxygen-binding mechanism. The Mossbauer spectrum for deoxy-Hr has a single quadrupole doublet with an isomeric shift typical of high-spin ferrous iron (8 = 1.14 mm/sec AEq = 2.76 mm/sec) (Clark and Webb, 1981). As for met-Hr the two iron environments are similar, yet differ in coordination number for exam-... [Pg.242]


See other pages where Iron structural properties is mentioned: [Pg.154]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.787]    [Pg.619]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.146]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.795 ]




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