Fe + S = FeS or 2Fe +3S = Fe2 +S3
SO2: sulfur dioxide S + O2 --> SO2
Cu + S = CuS
To balance silver plus sulfur, you would need to write the chemical equation for the reaction between silver and sulfur. Then, adjust the coefficients of each reactant to ensure that the number of atoms of each element is the same on both sides of the equation. This will give you the balanced equation for the reaction between silver and sulfur.
The chemical equation for germanium plus sulfur is Ge + S -> GeS.
The coefficient for sulfur dioxide in a balanced chemical equation will depend on the reaction it is involved in. To calculate the coefficient, you need to balance the chemical equation so that the number of atoms on both sides is equal. Once the equation is balanced, the coefficient for sulfur dioxide will be the number placed in front of its formula.
Fe + S = FeS
S is the chemical symbol of sulfur.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction of sulfur dioxide with water is: SO2 + H2O → H2SO3
it is a combustion. the word equation would be: sulfur + oxygen → sulfur dioxide the balanced chemical equation: S(s) + O₂(g) → SO₂(g)
To balance the chemical equation for the reaction between iron and sulfur to yield iron (II) sulfide, you would write: Fe + S -> FeS. This equation is already balanced as each side has one iron atom and one sulfur atom.
The chemical equation for the reaction of sulfur and oxygen to form sulfur trioxide is: 2S + 3O2 -> 2SO3
To balance the equation for sulfur plus oxygen gas yielding sulfur dioxide, you need to ensure that the number of atoms of each element is the same on both sides of the equation. The balanced equation is: S + O₂ → SO₂. This equation is already balanced, with one sulfur atom and two oxygen atoms on each side.