If you heat it up after you mix it, you will form "organosulfide" compounds.
When you mix oxygen, sulfur, and nitrogen, you are likely to get a mixture of gases that may include nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), and potentially other nitrogen and sulfur compounds depending on the specific conditions of the experiment. These gases can have various chemical properties and potential environmental implications.
No, iron filings and powdered sulfur are a heterogeneous mixture because they do not mix uniformly. You can see distinct particles of both substances when they are mixed together.
An iron and sulfur mix is called iron sulfide, which is also known as ferrous sulfide or iron (II) sulfide.
To separate the components of flour and sulfur, you can use a process called filtration. First, mix the flour and sulfur with water to form a slurry. Then, pass the slurry through a filter paper. The flour will be trapped in the filter paper while the sulfur will pass through as a solution.
Sulfur dioxide SO2 (written with two capitals)
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The system formed by the addition of sulfur to carbon disulfide is considered heterogeneous because sulfur and carbon disulfide are two distinct phases that do not mix uniformly.
Carbon dioxide gas will escape: HCO3- + H+ --> H2O + CO2
When you mix yellow and blue together, you get green.
At the room temperature they remain elements in a mixure; by heating a compound is obtained, carbon disulfide.
When yellow and red mix together, they create the color orange.
When you mix yellow and purple together, they create the color brown.
um.... when mixed with rain it makes acid rain i think well that's what i leant in my chemistry class.
It turns into sulfuric acid. Then add salt, and it becomes hydrochloric acid. Awesome, huh? I have some sulfur, and I am going to try it.
you die!
When carbon dioxide and chlorine mix, they do not react with each other. Both are stable molecules and they remain separate in the mixture.