No, they are very different compounds. The sulphide of Iron is a black solid containing the 'S-' radical. On the other hand, the sulphate of Iron is a white or pale green solid containing 'SO42-' radical.
Many, including Iron Sulphate, Sulphide, Oxide (rust) and more
Iron(II) sulphide: FeS. Iron sulphide is a synonym, but the first expression is more correct. Iron(III) sulphide: Fe2S3. Other forms of natural iron sulphides are known: see the link below.
Iron (II) sulfate is the correct name for this compound. The Fe ion has a charge of 2 and so does the sulfate ion, so there is no subscript after them.
Two elements, iron and sulpur, make up a molecule of the compound iron sulphide.
The two possible formulaunits for Iron Sulfide are; FeS, and Fe1S1
Iron plus sulfur react to form iron sulfide. This is a chemical reaction that takes place when iron powder is mixed with powdered sulfur in the presence of heat. The reaction produces a black compound called iron sulfide.
iron sulphide is FeS while rust is oxide of iron Fe2O3.
I think you mean copper sulphide? copper sulphide is the compound of sulphate and copper, they forge together and create something completely different. so no, copper sulphide and sulphate are completly different! (haha i think i probably sound really nerdy but y'know ah well)
The beginning and the end of which event?
iron and sulphate 2
When magnesium reacts with sulfur, they form magnesium sulfide with the chemical formula MgS. This compound is a binary ionic compound made of positively charged magnesium ions and negatively charged sulfide ions.
Iron Sulphide