I made some copper acetate solution, then I placed some zinc coated screws/nails in the solution and the copper was reduced and came out of solution--into the solution goes Zinc++ as well as some Iron, because I let it sit for a few days so I saw some rust developing.
Anyway, I filtered off the slurry that was some iron oxides/hydroxides/who knows what and took the dark brown liquid leftover.
That looked EXACTLY like Iron III acetate
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron(III)_acetateSo, perfect, I know what it is.
I throw some Sodium Metabisulfite into the mixture, and let it sit, the brown color completely dissapears and turns clear with a little excess Sodium meta on the bottom, and the tiniest 5mm thick layer of brown colored stuff, probably iron acetate.
My question is, Iron (II) and Iron (III) are known to have colors, but what made this clear? Were they all reduced to Iron (I)?? There was no metal that precipitated out so Iron is still in solution, I just don't know as what.
Thanks