you get 2 shaaag a sheep with a white baisterd and then fak his mum with a black dog....Quoted by the BNP!
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.
Sulfur, oxygen atoms and a whole lotta love
does not effect equilibrum
It really depends on what new compound I have made. If I have made hydrogen hydroxide, then it is vastly different.
3.2g ..... assuming it is iron (II) Sulphide FeS2. The relative atomic mass of iron is 56, sulphur is 32, so the ratio of masses of these two elements IN THE FORMULA = 56 : 64. If 2.8g of iron was used then, from the ratio, this will react with 3.2g of sulphur.
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.
the number of particles stays the same because you have not made or destroyed anything
sulfure trioxide decomposes into sulfur dioxide and oxygen
no,iron sulphide is made up when sulphur and iron is heated.
a compound is made when a reaction accours eg iron + heat + air = iron + oxide + air
In the lab FeS or iron sulfide, pyrite, is formed by heating a test tube containing powdered iron and powdered sulfur. This is conveniently done because reactions are faster when surface area between reactants, in this case iron and sulfur, is maximized. Heating in a Pyrex test tube using a lab Bunsen burner makes the reaction go very fast. Because this generates much heat, the tube needs to be taken out of the flame when the mixture starts to glow red. Always wear a face shield and have expert supervision, this is a violent reaction. In nature iron occurs as iron oxides. Sulfur appears as the free element in nature. When heated together, as in a volcano, the sulfur reacts with the iron oxides forming pyrite and oxygen. Due to the high temperatures the oxygen reacts with excess sulfur forming various sulfur oxides, depending entirely on proportions and surface interaction.
If you're talking about Iron (II) Sulfide, where the oxidation of Iron is 2+, 2 electrons from the Iron atom is transferred to the Sulfur atom, producing Fe2+ and S2- .
Cast iron is mostly made of iron or an iron alloy. It typically also has some silicon and manganese, along with trace amounts of impurities like sulfur.
No. Earth's core is made of metal, primarily iron and nickel.
The interior of Mars is composed of iron, nickel and sulfur.
Cast iron is mostly made of iron or an iron alloy. It typically also has some silicon and manganese, along with trace amounts of impurities like sulfur.
Sulfur, oxygen atoms and a whole lotta love