Smelting. Chemistry in history The Stone, Bronze, and Iron Ages are historical periods named after...

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Transcript of Smelting. Chemistry in history The Stone, Bronze, and Iron Ages are historical periods named after...

Smelting

Chemistry in history

• The Stone, Bronze, and Iron Ages are historical periods named after the most common material that was used for making tools during each time. The Bronze Ages came before the Iron Age because copper and tin, the elements that are melted together to form the alloy bronze, were both widely available and easily accessible metals. Bronze is stronger than either copper or tin alone. The Iron Age came later because iron is harder to reduce to elemental form. It requires smelting at a higher temperature than bronze

How can we start it?

• Limestone CaCO3 which is mixed with the iron ore in the furnace

• It is a decomposition reaction

• In this process,it'll produce CO2 and CaO

• CaCO3(s)→CaO(s)+CO2(g)

It's time to get our reducing agent!• CO2(g)+C(s)→2CO ( g)• The carbon dioxide(produced by CaCO3 )

oxidize the coke to form carbon monoxide, which is used to reduce the iron ore to iron.

• It is a redox reaction• In the process, carbon is oxidized and it is

reducing agent• Carbon dioxide is reduced and it is oxidizing

agent

Then we’ll get Iron

• Fe2O3+3CO=2Fe+3CO2• Iron ore(Fe2O3) is reduced by carbon monoxide

during this reaction.• The product is iron and carbon dioxide.• The reason we do not use carbon to reduce iron

ore directly is that carbon is solid.• It is not easy to make carbon react with iron ore,

which is also solid.• Additionally, Fe3O4 is a possible substitute for F

e2O3.

Considering about R&O

• CaCO3(s)→CaO(s)+CO2( g)• Ca:+2→+2 O:-2→-2

• CO2( g) +C( s)→ 2CO( g)• C: +4→+2 anotherC: 0→+2 O: -2→-

2• Fe2O3+3CO=2Fe+3CO2• Fe:+3→0 O: -2→-2 C: +2→+4