It is not possible.
When a magnet touches copper, there is no attraction or repulsion between them. This is because copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with the magnetic field produced by the magnet.
Copper(II) carbonate.
Copper and carbonate ions form copper carbonate. In practice, copper carbonate usually contains hydroxide ions as well.
When copper chloride and sodium carbonate are mixed, a green precipitate of copper carbonate forms. Copper carbonate is insoluble in water, causing it to settle out of the solution as a solid.
The easiest way is with a magnet. It'll attract the iron and not the copper. If you're on a higher budget, the difference in the melting point could help.
No, copper is not magnetic.
copper
No, a strong magnet will not attract a piece of copper. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it will not be influenced by a magnetic field in the same way that materials like iron or steel would.
When a magnet touches copper, there is no attraction or repulsion between them. This is because copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with the magnetic field produced by the magnet.
Brass is made of copper and zinc, and is NOT magnetic.
No it does not attract to magnets
The soft iron and magnet will attract each other - the copper will not be attracted to either of the other two.
Copper Carbonate.
copper(II) carbonate or cupric carbonate
Yes, copper is a type of magnet. not very strong if its a coin but strong enough to be attracted to another metal e.g: oid LOL or iron. you can make a magnet by stroking iron! proper fascinating.
This is because modern pennies are not entirely copper, they are nickel with a copper coating.
No, copper is not magnetic. That said, if the copper wire has an electric current flowing through it then it will generate its own magnetic field around the wire. It seems feasible that this could be enough to move the wire if you have another magnet near it.