SFe, but the thing is that you still need to subscripts so i cant help you there
The product is iron sulfide.
FeSO4 Iron II Sulfate is one possibility
Fe + S = FeS
There is no elemental iron (Fe) involved in this reaction, neither as reactant (iron sulphide -FeS- plus oxygen are) nor as product (iron oxide (FeO) plus sulphur dioxide are)
The equation of the reaction is Fe + S -> FeS, and this equation is already balanced because it has one atom of each of iron and sulfur in both the reactants and the products.
iron sulphate
The product is iron sulfide.
FeSO4 Iron II Sulfate is one possibility
Fe + S = FeS
Fe + S --> FeS
There is only one product, the ionic compound iron(II) sulfide.iron + sulfur --> iron(II) sulfide Fe + S --> FeS
Yes, Fe (iron) plus S (sulfur) equals FeS (iron sulfide). If the iron ion is iron(ll) then it is iron(ll) sulfide; if it is iron(lll), then it iron(lll) sulfide.
There is no elemental iron (Fe) involved in this reaction, neither as reactant (iron sulphide -FeS- plus oxygen are) nor as product (iron oxide (FeO) plus sulphur dioxide are)
fe2(s)2 fe2s
The equation of the reaction is Fe + S -> FeS, and this equation is already balanced because it has one atom of each of iron and sulfur in both the reactants and the products.
Iron is a metal but sulfur is a nonmetal.
Iron sulphate is expressed as FeSO4 and hydrogen is simply H. So to answer your question, iron sulphate plus hydrogen is made up of iron, sulfur, oxygen and hydrogen.