No, iodine is a violet coloured solid on heating it sublimed into violet gas.
No, these are two different things. They will have slightly different chemical equations to show the differences that arise.
Sulfur.
Iodine is a molecular solid, the large sized molecules are held together through weak Vander waal's forces so I2 molecules easily become sublimed,
Iodine resublimed is a highly purified form of iodine that has been sublimed, which means it has been heated to a gas then cooled back into a solid without passing through a liquid phase. It is often used in laboratory settings for various applications such as staining biological samples or as a nutritional supplement.
To separate a mixture of potassium chloride and iodine, you can use a process called sublimation. Iodine can be sublimed by heating the mixture, causing it to change from a solid directly to a gas. The iodine vapor can then be collected and condensed back into solid iodine. The remaining potassium chloride will be left behind as a solid.
It could have sublimed... and turned directly from a solid into a gas instead of melting first. Compounds such as iodine, carbon dioxide and others do this readily.See the Related Questions to the left for more information about sublimation.
Sublimed sulfur is preferred over precipitated sulfur in sulfur ointment because sublimed sulfur has smaller particle size, making it easier to penetrate the skin and exert its therapeutic effects. Additionally, sublimed sulfur is considered to have higher purity compared to precipitated sulfur, which may result in better efficacy and fewer potential impurities that could cause skin irritation.
sublimed.
Sublimed sulfur is often called flowers of sulfur. This is cyclic ring, S8 allotrope. Note that the sublimation is not what is normally meant as a transition from solid to gas. This is the precipitation of sulfur vapour in an inert atmosphere- its called sublimation but technially its deposition.
The common name for iodine is iodine.
iodine