Do you mean burned or boiled? If it's burned, then there was a chemical reaction, and it's a chemical change. If it was just heated until it boiled... well... that's a bit trickier, you see. The issue is that while boiling is usually a physical change and not a chemical change, the normal state of sulfur at room temperature and pressure is in ring molecules, S8 or higher. However, gaseous sulfur is diatomic molecules, S2. This is technically a chemical change since it involves breaking and reforming bonds, even though in both cases it's elemental sulfur.
When brimstone (sulfur) is burned with oxygen, sulfur dioxide gas is produced. This gas has a pungent odor and is often responsible for the characteristic smell of burnt matches.
Natural gas releases no sulfur when burned, making it a cleaner alternative to other fossil fuels like coal and oil.
No, a sulfur candle is not made of pure sulfur. It usually contains a mixture of sulfur and other chemicals that allow it to produce sulfur dioxide gas when burned. The sulfur dioxide gas is used for fumigation purposes.
When heating sulfur, a chemical reaction occurs. Sulfur undergoes a phase change from solid to liquid to gas as it is heated, but this is still considered a chemical change because the molecular structure of the sulfur is altered in the process.
When gas, oil, and coal are burned, they release carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and other pollutants into the atmosphere. These pollutants contribute to air pollution, acid rain, and climate change.
Yes, sulfur can be burned. When burned, sulfur reacts with oxygen in the air to produce sulfur dioxide gas and a blue flame.
After burning sulfur become another compound - sulfur dioxide (SO2), a gas.
When brimstone (sulfur) is burned with oxygen, sulfur dioxide gas is produced. This gas has a pungent odor and is often responsible for the characteristic smell of burnt matches.
Natural gas releases no sulfur when burned, making it a cleaner alternative to other fossil fuels like coal and oil.
Burning sulfur produces sulfur dioxide (SO2).
Heating sulfur is a physical change. You're not changing the chemical composition of the sulfur, just the temperature. Now if you heat it to its boiling point and and it changes to a vapor it's a chemical change because you've changed its state of matter.(Actually changing the state of matter of an object is still a physical change, as it does not change the chemical composition of the element)
No, a sulfur candle is not made of pure sulfur. It usually contains a mixture of sulfur and other chemicals that allow it to produce sulfur dioxide gas when burned. The sulfur dioxide gas is used for fumigation purposes.
When heating sulfur, a chemical reaction occurs. Sulfur undergoes a phase change from solid to liquid to gas as it is heated, but this is still considered a chemical change because the molecular structure of the sulfur is altered in the process.
When gas, oil, and coal are burned, they release carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and other pollutants into the atmosphere. These pollutants contribute to air pollution, acid rain, and climate change.
Yes, burning sulfur releases sulfur dioxide or SO2.
When potassium nitrate and sulfur react, they form potassium sulfate and nitrogen dioxide gas. This reaction is a chemical change where the substances combine to create new compounds.
It is a chemical property of sulfur because it involves a reaction with another substance to form a new compound. Chemical properties describe how a substance can undergo chemical changes to form new substances.