iron sulphate
There is no elemental iron (Fe) involved in this reaction, neither as reactant (iron sulphide -FeS- plus oxygen are) nor as product (iron oxide (FeO) plus sulphur dioxide are)
When iron reacts with sulfur, it forms iron sulfide. This is a chemical compound with the formula FeS. It is a grayish-black solid at room temperature.
SFe, but the thing is that you still need to subscripts so i cant help you there
When sulfur, oxygen, and iron combine, they can form iron sulfate or iron oxide depending on the specific conditions of the reaction. Iron sulfate is a compound that contains iron, sulfur, and oxygen atoms, while iron oxide is a compound that contains iron and oxygen atoms. The specific product will depend on the amounts of each element present and the reaction conditions.
The compound name for aluminum plus sulfur is aluminum sulfide.
Iron reacts with sulfur to form iron sulfide, also known as pyrite or fool's gold. The chemical equation for this reaction is: Fe + S -> FeS.
There is only one product, the ionic compound iron(II) sulfide.iron + sulfur --> iron(II) sulfide Fe + S --> FeS
Yes, Fe (iron) plus S (sulfur) equals FeS (iron sulfide). If the iron ion is iron(ll) then it is iron(ll) sulfide; if it is iron(lll), then it iron(lll) sulfide.
The balanced chemical equation is 8Fe + S8 -> 8FeS, representing the reaction where iron reacts with sulfur to form iron II sulfide.
ironsulphide
Iron sulphate is expressed as FeSO4 and hydrogen is simply H. So to answer your question, iron sulphate plus hydrogen is made up of iron, sulfur, oxygen and hydrogen.
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.