monoclinic and plastic
sulphur
YES!!! Sulphur exhibits several allotropes. The Yellow allotrope is 'S8'. It is sometimes named as ' flowers of sulphur'. There are at least two other allotropes, they are red sulphur, and white sulphur, but these are less common. NB An ALLOTROPE is a different physical form of the same element.
NO!!! It is an opaque non-,etallic solid. It exists in several allotropes. The most common allotrope being yellow. The other allotropes are colured red and white. They are known as '; - Yellow ; Flowers of sulphur) , red sulphur, and white sulphur. Historically, sulphur was known as 'brimstone' because it was collected from the edges(brims) of volcanoes.
allotropes.
Sulfur can form two covalent bonds as in H2S, and can form 6 as in SO3. In elemnatl allotropes of sulfur which are covalent bonded, many are cyclic compounds the number of covalent onds is 2.
Oxygen Sulphate (OS) is not in the periodic table because it is not an element. Rather, it is a compound made from two elements: Oxygen, and Sulphur. Oxygen is eighth on the periodic table, and sulphur is located at 16. Vertically, they are next to each other.
The are all composed of carbon (although coal commonly also contains other elements such as sulphur).
Allotropes are two or more different molecular forms of the same element in the same physical state. Examples include diamond and graphite, which are both allotropes of carbon.
Sulphur is a multivalent non-metal, abundant, tasteless and and odorless. In its native form sulphur is a yellow crystalline solid. In nature it occurs as the pure element or as sulfide and sulfate minerals. Although sulphur is infamous for its smell, frequently compare to rotten eggs, that odor is actually characteristic of hydrogen sulphide (H2S).The crystallography of sulphur is complex. Depending on the specific conditions, sulphur allotropes form several distinct crystal structures.
Sulphur expands when it solidifies Sulphur is bright yellow
sulphur is a non metal. It is a solid, usually encountered as a yellow powder but there are a number of different forms (allotropes)
graphite, diamond, coal, coke, fullerene