Yes, the reaction is possible when the mixture is heated.
No. That will simply be a mixture. Then need to react chemically.
A mixture of Iron and Sulphur is exactly that, iron filings mixed with sulphur that has not undergone any chemical reaction. Iron sulphide is the result of the reaction of Iron with sulphur.
it says sulphide so it is oxygen so it is iron, sulphur and oxygen but not in this order you may need to research the order as it is a certain one
IRON see chemical elements .com http://www.chemicalelements.com/
According to John Dalton matter can neither be created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction. The law of conservation ofass given by A Lavoisier suggest that total mass of products is equal to the the total mass of reactants .In other words there is no change in mass during a chemical reaction.
That produces a strongly exothermic reaction that results in the production of a grey substance, an iron sulphide. Please see the link.
Iron and sulphur make iron sulphide
Iron Sulphide
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.
A mixture of Iron and Sulphur is exactly that, iron filings mixed with sulphur that has not undergone any chemical reaction. Iron sulphide is the result of the reaction of Iron with sulphur.
iron and sulphur
No Iron sulphide is a compound
The zinc sulfide is ZnS.
If you mean, "What elements make up iron sulphide," then they are Iron and Sulphur. Various 'types' of iron sulphide exist, including FeS (iron (II) sulphide), FeS2 (commonly known as pyrite, iron (II) disulphide or fool's gold), and Fe2S3 (iron (III) sulphide).
The two possible formulaunits for Iron Sulfide are; FeS, and Fe1S1
Iron sulphide is an ionic compound. The Iron is in a +2 oxidation state and the sulphur is in a -2 oxidation state.
If you just mix iron and sulphur together, you're still left with a pile of iron and sulphur that are distinctly separate and could be easily separated by throwing the mixture in water (iron sinks, sulphur powder floats). If they were to react together, to become iron sulphide, then they would be chemically bound to each other as a compound and wouldn't be able to be separated by physical means.
it says sulphide so it is oxygen so it is iron, sulphur and oxygen but not in this order you may need to research the order as it is a certain one