yes
Yes, Copper Sulphate crystals can dissolve in water to form a blue solution.
You can dissolve blue copper sulphate crystals faster by increasing the temperature of the solvent (water), stirring the solution, or crushing the crystals to increase the surface area in contact with the solvent.
When copper sulphate crystals dissolve in water, the copper and sulphate ions separate and move randomly in the water due to thermal motion. This random movement leads to the spreading of the copper and sulphate ions from an area of high concentration (crystals) to an area of low concentration. This process is known as diffusion.
Yes, in a saturated copper sulfate solution.
No. All metal sulphate are soluble in water, except barium sulphate, calcium sulphate and lead sulphate.
Yes, Copper Sulphate crystals can dissolve in water to form a blue solution.
You can dissolve blue copper sulphate crystals faster by increasing the temperature of the solvent (water), stirring the solution, or crushing the crystals to increase the surface area in contact with the solvent.
When copper sulphate crystals dissolve in water, the copper and sulphate ions separate and move randomly in the water due to thermal motion. This random movement leads to the spreading of the copper and sulphate ions from an area of high concentration (crystals) to an area of low concentration. This process is known as diffusion.
Yes, in a saturated copper sulfate solution.
No. All metal sulphate are soluble in water, except barium sulphate, calcium sulphate and lead sulphate.
copper sulphate is soluble in water - take the reaction to form blue crystals (sulphuric acid + copper carbonate) - once the water is evaporated off blue crystals are left. And if the water is evaporated off still the crystals turn white! so it must be.
Water changes blue anhydrous copper sulphate crystals to white by creating hydrated copper sulphate, which is white in color.
The white copper sulphate will become blue. This is because copper sulphate usually has 5 moles of H2O, but it has reached a temperature where all five moles will have detached themselves from the copper sulphate, so it will become anhydrous (without water) and white. Then, when water is added back to it, it returns to its original blue state.
Yes, copper sulphate can dissolve in water. When added to water, copper sulphate dissociates into copper ions (Cu2+) and sulphate ions (SO4 2-), forming a blue-colored solution.
Well copper sulphate crystals can be dissolved in water so when dissolved you filter the solution to remove the broken glass then evaporate the water then collect the crystals or crystallisation.
Copper sulfate crystals are washed with alcohol to remove any impurities or excess water that may be present on the surface of the crystals. Alcohol can help to dissolve these impurities and evaporate quickly, leaving behind clean and pure copper sulfate crystals.
copper sulphate is soluble.dissolve the two in water whereby cuso4 dissolves.filter the mixture the put the filtrate in an evaporating dish to evaporate excess water.do not evaporate to dryness coz some water ir required for crystalization.