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No, heating would not separate iron and sulfur.
Iron is a magnetic substance, which means it is attracted by a magnet. On the other hand, Sulfur is a non-magnetic substance. If you place a magnet near a mixture of Iron and Sulfur, the iron pieces will stick to the magnet, while the sulfur powder will remain.
after heating a compound named iron sulphide is formed which is a non-metal
The product is iron sulfide.
yes.
No, heating would not separate iron and sulfur.
Iron is a magnetic substance, which means it is attracted by a magnet. On the other hand, Sulfur is a non-magnetic substance. If you place a magnet near a mixture of Iron and Sulfur, the iron pieces will stick to the magnet, while the sulfur powder will remain.
after heating a compound named iron sulphide is formed which is a non-metal
Heating sulfur with iron fillings lead to the formation of iron sulfide - a chemical compound.
The hot iron particles oxidize in the presence of the sulfur particles to iron sulfide.
An iron sulfide is obtained: FeS2.
it was a heterogenous mixture because the iron was in solid state and so was the sulfur
The product is iron sulfide.
yes.
yes.
Sulfur before being heated in the mixture weighs less and is less reactive than in the heated mixture.
By heating this compound is thermally dissociated: iron oxide and sulfur dioxide are obtained.