yes, in an ionic bond. But you would need two lithiums with one Sulfur.
Sulfur
Li - Lithium is a metalSi - Silicon is a metalloid, a semiconductorS - Sulfur is a nonmetal
Because lithium form a cation and sulfur an anion the lithium sulfide (Li2S) form an ionic compound, a salt.
Lithium Sulfur cyanide
A singly charged lithium cation.
When lithium and sulfur combine, they do so as Li2S (lithium sulfide). This is an ionic compound.
This compound is lithium sulfide - Li2S.
Sulfur
Sulfur itself is pure because it is an element, but many things can combine with sulfur to create different minerals.
Lithium (Li) reacts with sulfur (S) to produce lithium sulfide Li2S.
Sulfuric acid is a compound
Li - Lithium is a metalSi - Silicon is a metalloid, a semiconductorS - Sulfur is a nonmetal
Chlorine can combine with anything in the first column (ie. hydrogen, lithium, etc.) and it will become stable. This is according to the Octet rule.
Because lithium form a cation and sulfur an anion the lithium sulfide (Li2S) form an ionic compound, a salt.
Neon is chemically inert and doesnt combine with lithium
element. Sulfur dioxide (SO2) is a compound
Lithium sulfate forms an ionic lattice, and it has seven atoms in its empirical formula.