Atoms don't look like anything because their diameter is smaller than the wave length of visible light. Not enough light reflects off of a single atom to give it a shape or even detectable color.
Atoms don't look like anything because their diameter is smaller than the wave length of visible light. Not enough light reflects off of a single atom to give it a shape or even detectable color.
Iron in it's normal and natural state is very dull. It only appears shiny once it is processed through human processing plants.
it's shiny
On the link below, look at the very bottom of the page.
Fe2+ and Fe3+
shiny , silver, other stuff
really pale yellow
Probably, it will form a blackish,sticky substance.
Iron sulfide
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Sulfur and iron filings together are a mixture.
Heating sulfur with iron fillings lead to the formation of iron sulfide - a chemical compound.
Iron is silver while sulfur is yellow, Iron is magnetic while sulfur is not, and Iron looks like dirt and sulfur looks like yellow powdered sugar
Probably, it will form a blackish,sticky substance.
Iron is a metal but sulfur is a nonmetal.
Pyrite is made of iron and sulfur and is the compound iron sulfide with the chemical formula FeS2. It is not a mixture of iron and sulfur. The iron and sulfur are chemically combined to form a compound.
Iron sulfates contain iron, sulfur and oxygen.
iron sulfide
A mixture of iron and sulfur can be separated using a magnet- the iron will be attracted to the magnet, sulfur will not. Not the that the iron could be coated with sulfur powder so an extra step is required to remove it.
Iron sulfide
Use a magnet to extract the iron from the sulfur.
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The iron and sulfur react to form the compound iron sulfide.
No, heating would not separate iron and sulfur.