Sulfur is one of the 92 naturally occurring elements, and is not a compound of any
others. So you can't split or decompose sulfur to get any other elements, and you
can't combine other elements to make sulfur.
Sulfur likes to bond with Galena, Gypsum, Pyrite, Sphalerite, Cinnabar, Stibnite, Celestine, and Barite.
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ionic bond
Sulfur can replace oxygen in some compounds, for example thiols. In this case, sulfur and hydrogen form covalent bonds (like ROH and RSH). Because sulfur is also like oxygen, it should also be expected for form weak, or Van Der Waals, types of interactions between molecules (look up hydrogen bonding).
they share a nonpolar covalent bond
Phosphorous and sulfur will form a covalent bond.
Nitrogen and sulfur can form a covalent bond with up to four bonds. This creates a strong bond between the two atoms which can be difficult to break.
No. Calcium and sulfur will form an ionic bond.
S8 has the single bond....
ionic bond
An ionic bond.
A polar covalent bond is formed by the sharing of electrons between sulfur and nitrogen.
The similarity of sulfur molecule and the sulfur dioxide molecule is the type of bond.
The type of bond that occurs between calcium and sulfur atoms is ionic.
Sulfur and oxygen will form polar covalent bond
covalent bonds
covalent bond
The bond between sulfur and bromine is covalent.
Sulfur can replace oxygen in some compounds, for example thiols. In this case, sulfur and hydrogen form covalent bonds (like ROH and RSH). Because sulfur is also like oxygen, it should also be expected for form weak, or Van Der Waals, types of interactions between molecules (look up hydrogen bonding).