You get a really big explosion. Sulfur mixed with water is BANG!!!
The iron will line up with copper in a triangular crystaline structer cause of the diamagnetic property of copper might make interesting nano struture . Drop out loser on the dole
At room temperature is only a metals mixture.
Iron sulphide
iron sulphide
It forms copper (I) oxide and copper (II) oxide, mostly the (II) oxide that is black. If you talk about what color is emitted a green/turquoise when heated. If in a oxygen-poor atmosphere it melts without oxidising.
nothing will happen as i have done this experiment. I think it is because iron is more reactive than copper, so the copper can't take away the sulphate. but if you added the iron to a copper sulphate solution the product would be iron sulphate this reaction is called displacment. David corrected by hari
Mix it in water,the sugar will dissove leaving the sulphur undissolved
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.
Well, if we mix iron sulfur mixture and hydrochlonic acid, only the iron reacts.
iron sulphide
its vibrating
Copper Sulfide is a wholly different chemical from copper and sulfur, and thus shows different characteristics and is not dividable by physical means, while a mixture of copper and sulfur powder is just a physical mix.
iron sulphate will be created
We can observe small particles of iron and sulfur.
Use a magnet to remove the iron filings from the mixture, then mix the remaining components with water. The copper sulfate will dissolve but the CaCO3 (chalk powder) will not. Filter the mixture to remove the chalk, then boil the water to recover the copper sulfate.
It forms copper (I) oxide and copper (II) oxide, mostly the (II) oxide that is black. If you talk about what color is emitted a green/turquoise when heated. If in a oxygen-poor atmosphere it melts without oxidising.
sulphur can not be mixed with water.
they can't mix because they r both different elements
Diffusion occurs - The particles of copper sulphate move between the particles iron because the particles are tiny and discrete.
you get a hard substance called copper sulfate. it smells really bad however, and it is a dark color with a tint of blue. -ahmad khatib