It would all depend entirely on the situation and environment that this experiment is conducted within. I'll try to cover the basic scenarios
Iron and Sulphur will not bond at regular boiling point. That being said, I will assume that these agents have not indeed bonded and are a mixture of the two minerals.
That being the case, you can separate Iron from Sulphur using a magnet.
Hope this answers your question
If it is a simple mixture of Fe and S you can use a magnet to separate iron. Of course, the method is not valid for an iron sulphide.
Heating up a magnet actually makes it weaker. A magnet can be completely demagnetized when heated past it's Curie temperature.
It would be a compound because a solution is a liquid which is hard to separate and it is not easy to separate by a magnet or something like a mixture. So it would be a compound, IM SMART!!! :)
If the mixture is passed quickly through a magnetic field, eddy currents are formed in the moving metal and cause a small electric field that pulls the aluminum into the magnet. The problem is that once the metal stops moving, it ceases being attracted and then falls down.
heating the magnet past the Curie point
Iron can be separated with a magnet.
A magnet can extract iron from a mixture.
A magnet. The magnet will attract the magnetic material to it and so separate the magnetic material from the mixture.
Use a magnet.
Lets say you have mixture of sand and salt. Put your mixture on a filter paper and by using a strong magnet you should be able to separate sand from salt. Using a magnet is a powerful way to separate out one solid from another in a mixture.
I don't
A magnet
a magnet or hot plate
You need a magnet to separate iron from a mixture (not from a compound).
Yes, a magnet is one way that can be used to separate a mixture of iron filings and sulfur.
Diffrent types of metal
use a magnet