I'm interested in why the poster believes he has hematite? It's much more likely he has a funky iron carbide compound interspersed with iron oxide. This was a pyrolysis tube, right? Carbon-containing pyrolyzate and iron/iron oxides. Sounds like hot nitric is just the ticket or maybe aqua regia or piranah etch.
I wasn't 100% sure that I have hematite. I assumed that it's mainly hematite because all the ferrocene that remains in the tube were subsequently oxidized in air at 800°C. This might be a dumb question, but would iron carbides be stable from oxidation at such high temperature?
Another reason why I assumed it was hematite was because of the reddish-orange coloration after the air oxidation step.
I don't think I can get away with soaking the tube with 1M nitric acid, let alone hot 6M nitric acid, aqua regia or piranha. Note that the tube is 5L in volume.
In any case, I had alumina blocks that I use in the work which also contaminated with the reddish iron containing compound. I decided to soak this in 2M nitric acid for a few days. It didn't seem to clean it up. Urghh... Hate stubborn stains.