Extraction of Iron from Hematite (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Alexandra Brennan

Written by: Alexandra Brennan

Reviewed by: Stewart Hird

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Extraction of iron from hematite

  • Iron is extracted in a large container called a blast furnace from its ore, hematite 

  • Modern blast furnaces produce approximately 10,000 tonnes of iron per day 

The blast furnace

Carbon Extraction of Iron, downloadable AS & A Level Chemistry revision notes

Diagram showing the carbon extraction of iron

  • The raw materials: iron ore (hematite), coke (an impure form of carbon), and limestone are added into the top of the blast furnace

  • Hot air is blown into the bottom

Zone 1

  • Coke burns in the hot air forming carbon dioxide 

  • The reaction is exothermic so it gives off heat, heating the furnace

carbon + oxygen → carbon dioxide

Zone 2

  • At the high temperatures in the furnace, more coke reacts with carbon dioxide forming carbon monoxide

  • Carbon dioxide has been reduced to carbon monoxide

carbon + carbon dioxide → carbon monoxide

Zone 3

  • Carbon monoxide reduces the iron(III) oxide in the iron ore to form iron 

  • This will melt and collect at the bottom of the furnace, where it is tapped off

iron(III) oxide + carbon monoxide  →  iron + carbon dioxide

  • Limestone (calcium carbonate) is added to the furnace to remove impurities in the ore

    • The calcium carbonate in the limestone thermally decomposes to form calcium oxide

calcium carbonate → calcium oxide + carbon dioxide

  • The calcium oxide formed reacts with the silicon dioxide, which is an impurity in the iron ore, to form calcium silicate

  • This melts and collects as a molten slag floating on top of the molten iron, which is tapped off separately

calcium oxide + silicon dioxide →  calcium silicate

Examiner Tips and Tricks

For Core students, the symbol equations are not needed for the different reactions involved in the extraction of iron from hematite.

Equations for extraction of iron from hematite

Extended tier only

Zone 1

  • The burning of carbon (coke) to provide heat and produce carbon dioxide:

C (s)  +  O2 (g)  →  CO2 (g)

Zone 2

  • The reduction of carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide:

CO2 (g)  +  C (s)  →  2CO (g)

Zone 3

  • The reduction of iron(III) oxide by carbon monoxide:

Fe2O3 (s)  +  3CO (g)  →  2Fe (I)  +  3CO2 (g)

  • The thermal decomposition of calcium carbonate (limestone) to produce calcium oxide:

CaCO3 (s)  →  CaO (s)  +  CO(g)

  • The formation of slag:

CaO (s)  +  SiO2 (s)  →  CaSiO(l)

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Alexandra Brennan

Author: Alexandra Brennan

Expertise: Chemistry

Alex studied Biochemistry at Newcastle University before embarking upon a career in teaching. With nearly 10 years of teaching experience, Alex has had several roles including Chemistry/Science Teacher, Head of Science and Examiner for AQA and Edexcel. Alex’s passion for creating engaging content that enables students to succeed in exams drove her to pursue a career outside of the classroom at SME.

Stewart Hird

Author: Stewart Hird

Expertise: Chemistry Lead

Stewart has been an enthusiastic GCSE, IGCSE, A Level and IB teacher for more than 30 years in the UK as well as overseas, and has also been an examiner for IB and A Level. As a long-standing Head of Science, Stewart brings a wealth of experience to creating Topic Questions and revision materials for Save My Exams. Stewart specialises in Chemistry, but has also taught Physics and Environmental Systems and Societies.