Probably, it will form a blackish,sticky substance.
Heating sulfur with iron fillings lead to the formation of iron sulfide - a chemical compound.
If you just mix iron and sulphur together, you're still left with a pile of iron and sulphur that are distinctly separate and could be easily separated by throwing the mixture in water (iron sinks, sulphur powder floats). If they were to react together, to become iron sulphide, then they would be chemically bound to each other as a compound and wouldn't be able to be separated by physical means.
When Iron and sulphur bond if forms the compound iron sulphide
iron oxide
Iron sulfide
A compound of iron and sulfur is called ferric sulfide. But you would have to be pretty smart to do that.
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.
Iron sulfide
Because in a chemical compound is a chemical bond between the elements. From a mixture of iron and sulfur iron can be separated with a magnet.
It is a compound because it is composed of the elements iron and sulfur.
The iron and sulfur react to form the compound iron sulfide.
Because in a chemical compound is a chemical bond between the elements. From a mixture of iron and sulfur iron can be separated with a magnet.
It depends on the temperature. If you only heat moderately, you will still have a mixture of iron and sulfur, even if the sulfur has melted and formed a kind of cement with the iron. If you put the mixture in a vacuum, and then heat up to the combustion temperature of the mixture, then you would get some amount of iron sulfide, which is a compound. You need the vacuum so that the sulfur, for instance, does not react with oxygen and just burn down to sulfur dioxide gas, probably leaving the iron mostly unaffected. If you have the exact ratio of iron to sulfur for reaction, you will get only iron sulfide compound, but any other ratio will leave either some iron or some sulfur unreacted.
Heating sulfur with iron fillings lead to the formation of iron sulfide - a chemical compound.
Yes, ferrous sulfate or iron II sulfate, FeSO4, is a compound of iron, sulfur, and oxygen.
When sufficiently heated, iron filings and sulfur react to produce a compound, iron (II) sulfide.
Iron is a solid as it is heatea with sulfur it forms iron sulfric k really i dont knw the answer i guess it :)