Sulphur's crystal structure is orthorhombic.
Search images.google.com for sulphus crystal to see numerous examples.
A crystal of copper sulfate contains copper, sulfur and oxygen.
The color of ferrous sulphate crystals is green. However on heating, it yields a brownish mass ( as water is lost) and on further heating they lead to release of a mixture of sulfur dioxide and sulfur trioxide
SCl4 is the chemical formula for sulfur tetrachloride.
This element is Sulfur.
Sulphur's crystal structure is orthorhombic.
1.you can get a sulfur crystal in any general store or 2.in any rock shop
Search images.google.com for sulphus crystal to see numerous examples.
Sulfur has a number of allotropes, the best known is S8, commonly known as rhombic sulfur. There are some nice pictures about- google rhombic sulfur images.
i think sulfur is the softest and crystal is hardest
sulfur is roughly as abundant in the earth's crust as carbon. sulfur is abundant and widely distributed in nature, occurring in element for as yellow crystal, in the sulfide.
batery fluids, many acitones, sulfur and sometimes flavoring
A crystal of copper sulfate contains copper, sulfur and oxygen.
It is a crystal (HgS) containing the metal mercury and the non-metal sulfur. This is a common combination in chemistry because the metals are positively charged and sulfur is S2-.
The color of ferrous sulphate crystals is green. However on heating, it yields a brownish mass ( as water is lost) and on further heating they lead to release of a mixture of sulfur dioxide and sulfur trioxide
Solid sulfur has several crystalline forms- "allotropes". One common form, th eone most often encountered is called rhombic sulfur and this contains S8 rings. This is the form found in "flowers of sulfur" or "roll sulfur". <br/> Sulfur is unusual as it can form rings with from 6 to 20 sulfur atoms, and can also form long chains, a property that chemists call catenation. The bright yellow colour of commercal rhombic sulfur is apparently caused by traces of S7 (cyclo-heptasulfur).<br/> There is a good article in the English wikipedia "allotropes of sulfur" with a comprehensive list of the solid and gas forms as well as what occurs in liquid sulfur.