yes
It does not react to oxygen like potassium, if that is what you meant. Sulfur is flammable if it is lit and turns into a blood red liquid with a blue flame and a pungent odor.
You will get SO2 or sulphur dioxide, an acidic oxide
Sulphur burns in air (oxygen ) to give sulphur dioxide. S + O2 ---> SO2
Yes, sulfur can be burned. When burned, sulfur reacts with oxygen in the air to produce sulfur dioxide gas and a blue flame.
Yes, eg. in matches, burning to form sulfur dioxide, the nose prickeling gas.
Yes, sulfur can burn in air forming sulfur dioxide.
It does not react to oxygen like potassium, if that is what you meant. Sulfur is flammable if it is lit and turns into a blood red liquid with a blue flame and a pungent odor.
You will get SO2 or sulphur dioxide, an acidic oxide
Sulphur burns in air (oxygen ) to give sulphur dioxide. S + O2 ---> SO2
Yes, sulfur can be burned. When burned, sulfur reacts with oxygen in the air to produce sulfur dioxide gas and a blue flame.
Yes, eg. in matches, burning to form sulfur dioxide, the nose prickeling gas.
Yes, burning sulfur releases sulfur dioxide or SO2.
because sulfur is a very corrrosive chemical and can burn through solid rock
Sulfur is combustible and can burn with a blue flame, producing sulfur dioxide gas.
sulpher dioxide. eh Corrected: yes... it's sulfur.. and when you burn sulfur you'll get sulfur dioxide after combuston.
Sulfur tends to burn, forming sulfur dioxide, which combines with water to form sulfuric acid, so in practice, sulfur leads to acidity. But it is not in itself an acid.
This is a play on words. Sulfur weighs 2 kg when dry because that's its actual weight. When wet, it weighs 1 kg because the water added decreases its weight to 1 kg. When burned, the sulfur combines with oxygen from the air, increasing its weight as part of the chemical reaction with oxygen to form sulfur dioxide.