Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Yellow gas from iron sulfide

thesmug - 13-4-2014 at 12:07

Excuse this extremely beginner question but earlier today I was making some iron sulfide and as the reaction proceeded there was a yellow gas being evolved. I know it's not sulfur dioxide or hydrogen sulfide so what was it?

plante1999 - 13-4-2014 at 12:12

vapors of sulphur.

Bert - 13-4-2014 at 12:12

How about a complete lab description? I have NO IDEA what chemicals you used or how your process was conducted?

thesmug - 13-4-2014 at 12:16

Sorry Bert, I mixed equal stoichiometric quantities of sulfur and iron filings. They were mixed thoroughly and put in a porcelain dish. The mixture was heated by an alcohol flame until the sulfur melted. Heating was removed when the mixture began to glow. The mixture was cooled and collected until testing could be done.

Zyklon-A - 13-4-2014 at 12:17

It's almost certainly airborne sulfur particles and vapors of sulfur.


[Edited on 13-4-2014 by Zyklonb]

elementcollector1 - 13-4-2014 at 12:23

Yep, sulfur. I remember seeing this stuff when I was working a blacksmithing forge that used genuine anthracite as a fuel source. We'd make so much smoke that the archery range 100 feet upwind would complain of being blind.