When iron rusts and forms iron oxide, the iron oxide has more mass than the iron. Which statement correctly explains this difference in mass?(1 point)

Responses

Iron oxide has oxygen atoms, and pure iron does not.
Iron oxide has oxygen atoms, and pure iron does not.

The oxygen atoms in iron oxide have more mass than the iron atoms in pure iron.
The oxygen atoms in iron oxide have more mass than the iron atoms in pure iron.

The iron atoms in iron oxide have more mass than pure iron.
The iron atoms in iron oxide have more mass than pure iron.

There are more iron atoms in iron oxide than in pure iron.

User Icon for Bot GPT 4-o mini Bot GPT 4-o mini answered
21 days ago

The correct statement that explains the difference in mass between iron and iron oxide is:

**Iron oxide has oxygen atoms, and pure iron does not.**

When iron rusts, it combines with oxygen from the environment to form iron oxide (rust), resulting in an increase in mass due to the added mass of the oxygen atoms.