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you an use a magnet to get the iron fillings out
That produces a strongly exothermic reaction that results in the production of a grey substance, an iron sulphide. Please see the link.
Iron sulfides are obtained.
Though Sulphur is an ingredient in fertilizers, I don;t think you should apply it by itself. Read more in link.
No. Sulphur or if you must Sulfur is an element. It is not a mixture of any kind.
you an use a magnet to get the iron fillings out
by using carbon disulphide
The iron fillings are attracted by the magnet and separated from the sulphur powder.
Probably the simplest way would be to use a strong magnet to attract the iron filings only from the mixture, leaving the sulfur behind.
Iodine is soluble in carbon tetrachloride.
five examples of mixture are 1.sulphur powder and iron fillings 2.rice and pulse 3.nuts and bolts 4.salt and water 5.sandwich
When you mix Iron filings and Sulphur crystals together, you form a mixture of Iron and Sulphur from which both the components can be separated by physical means. But if you heat the mixture strongly, then it becomes a compound of Iron Sulphide from which the two components cannot be separated by physical means.
That produces a strongly exothermic reaction that results in the production of a grey substance, an iron sulphide. Please see the link.
Sulphur plus water is a nonhomogeneous mixture.
It is very simple
It is very simple
Solutions are a type of mixture, so it's not really an either/or thing. However, in order to be considered a solution, the mixture must be homogenous, and a mixture of sulfur and iron filings is decidedly not homogeneous on a microscopic level. So it's (just) a mixture, not the specific type of mixture called a solution.