In this episode of Scientific Tuesdays: We will take a look at the fun and exciting chemical reaction of Sulfur and Iron. These two materials create an interesting reaction when they have a little heat applied. So put on your goggles and gloves and join us as we take another plunge into chemistry.
Check out netflix yall: http://netflix.com/science !!!
thurmite...
krazor8 8 hours ago
Crap! The outro song nearly blew out my ears! Try to keep an even volume level, please.
jamestbfraser 2 days ago
@MrPersonperson22
TV is l like 30% commercials. Lmao.
Neutuality 6 days ago
@thesickandwounded well tv is about 75 percent comercials
MrPersonperson22 6 days ago
if i wanted 60% commertials and 40% what i actually wanna watch.. i'd watch TV.
thesickandwounded 1 week ago
I don't see why you say we don't need a computer to watch Netflix, seeing as how most people watching this are on a computer....
supershadow64ds 1 week ago
@Maker0fRobots Go back and build your little robots, bro. If you need to announce that you've unsubscribed, you obviously are still subscribed.
supershadow64ds 1 week ago
THE URL DOESN'T WORK!
ricoxkiller 1 week ago
5:03-5:21 is a mini nuke
therandomguyoverther 1 week ago
This reaction will not create FeS, a relatively unstable iron-sulfur compound. Burning in air will most likely create iron sulfate. Heating FeS or FeS2 in air would.
Weighing the product would have been more scientific than just looking at it. Due to the excess iron, your result may have been difficult to analyze, especially as you can see some of the S burning off with a blue flame.
Sulfur burns to form sulfur oxides that have a choking "odor." H2S is the nasty "rotten egg" smell.
DrScienceGuy0 1 week ago