It is very easy to damage any copper pipe.
You could get Diarrhea, Kidney Damage, Heart Arrhythmia, Central Nervous System Failure and possibly death.
There are many places where one could find information on how to install electric central heating. There are many places where one could search for advice like WikiHow. One could also contact a home heating professional.
There could be a draft causing the pilot light to go out.
You could place the copper sulfate solution in an evaporation dish and let the water evaporate at room temperature over a period of days.
heat and light
Wash the mixture with water and separate the solid from the liquid, for example, by filtration. The sodium chloride will dissolve in the wash water, while the copper is left behind.
Could it be because an air conditioner is not designed to produce heat?
Carbonate by itself is an ion that does not contain copper and therefore could not produce copper if heated. However, because carbonate is a negatively charged ion, no substantial number of carbonate ions can exist stably except in association with an equal number of positively charged cations to neutralize the electrical charge of the carbonate ions. If these cations are cations of copper, then copper oxide can be produced by heating the copper carbonate salt.
Central heating systems usually heat on a different system from the hot water heater, unless the main heater is a combination furnace/hot water heater. If this is the case, it could be because the outflow of hot water is greater than the ability of the furnace to heat the water.
At elevated temperatures mercury reacts slowly with oxygen to form mercuric oxide, HgO. A mercuric oxide may be formed chemically but is unstable, decomposing to a mixture of mercury and mercuric oxide. IDK if your talking about heating it or heating in the air literally but that's all i can help u with
Well, you could heat it to about 30,000 K. It would be a gas at that temperature, but it would definitely be glowing blue. Other than that, copper doesn't turn blue simply from heating. You might be able to get a blue patina on copper by heating it and forming a very thin layer of oxides on the surface, but controlling the color is tricky, because the exact color is very dependent on the thickness of the oxide layer (this same effect is what's responsible for the "rainbow" colors of oil on water).
The reservoir tank in the roof might empty, and in extreme cases the pipework leading to other radiators higher than yours might also empty, so the whole central heating network might break down. This could also lead to boiler damage.