It is "very slightly soluble" in alcohol. Seriously, though, elemental sulfur doesn't really like to dissolve in anything.
Sulfur Dioxide is soluble in alcohol and water.
Sulphur dissolves in a liquid called carbon disulphide.
Carbon disulfide can be used to separate a mixture of iron filings and sulfur. This is because carbon disulfide can be used to dissolve sulfur, thus leaving you with the iron filings.
Sulfur melts at a much lower temperature than sand. That might be useful. Also, there are solvents which will dissolve sulfur but not silicon dioxide. Finally, there's always the magnifying glass and tweezers method.
Sulfur dioxide combines with oxygen and water to form acid rain Sulfuric and sulfurous acids). The acid can corrode metal and dissolve limestone, marble and cement.
Alcohol is polar,so polar substances would dissolve in it.eg water.
Sulfur will not dissolve in water, it can in carbon disulfide (CS2)
Ethanol is already an alcohol.
by solvent extraction. sulfur can be dissolve in carbon di sulphide solution.
Non are affected, only sulfur will dissolve in it, not iron.
no only royal metals
Just air
Alcohol is a non-polar solvent and does not dissolve salt as well as water does. If there is water in the alcohol then some of it will dissolve.
Alcohol is used only in the chromatographic separation of substances that do not dissolve in other common solvents but dissolve in alcohol.
It doesn't dissolve in water. It dissolves in alcohol.
yes, it is a lipohilic plant and will dissolve in alcohol.
yes