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Iron Monoxide

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Revision as of 15:03, 16 October 2025 by Cdjensen94 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{DISPLAYTITLE:Iron Monoxide}} {{Substance | name = Iron Monoxide | image = Iron_monoxide_structure.png | imagecaption = Simplified FeO lattice. | formula = FeO | molar_mass = 71.85 g/mol | phase = Solid / Vapor (trace) | type = Metal Oxide | appearance = Black powder; vaporizes under extreme heat | smell = Metallic, earthy | solubility = Insoluble in water | melting_point = 1377 °C | hazards = Reactive when heated; causes metal fume fever | origin = Oxidation of Iron...")
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Overview

Iron Monoxide (FeO) is a transition-metal oxide formed under low oxygen conditions. Though rarely stable on Earth-like worlds, it occurs naturally in meteoritic crusts and volcanic vents. In the Continuum, its presence in an atmosphere is a harbinger of metallic storms and forge-world climates.

Physical and Chemical Properties

Iron monoxide consists of divalent iron (Fe²⁺) bound to oxygen, forming a basic oxide. It oxidizes further to Feā‚‚Oā‚ƒ or Feā‚ƒOā‚„ upon exposure to air. In plasma environments such as Ignispheric worlds, vaporized FeO emits green light and conducts psionic current—forming ā€œiron rain.ā€

Phases

  • **Solid:** Mineral wüstite, dark and magnetic.
  • **Vapor:** Found as metallic fume in plasma vents or stellar forges.
  • **Condensate:** Magnetic dust settling after divine smelting storms.

Uses and Occurrences

  • Indicator of reducing atmospheres and molten metal cycles.
  • Ingredient in divine forges, symbolizing balance between order (metal) and decay (oxide).
  • Observed in the atmospheres of volcanic PermianLike and Ignispheric worlds.

Related Atmospheres

Trivia

  • The term ā€œiron rainā€ originates from divine chronicles describing molten droplets condensing in the upper forges of Ignispheric planets.
  • FeO crystals retain weak psionic magnetism, used in constructing memory compasses.