The chemical formula for blue vitriol (copper sulphate pentahydrate) is CuSO4.
CuSO4(copper sulphate pentahydrate)
CuSO4.5H2O
Iron (II)Sulfate - FeSO4.7H2O
FeSO₄ is Iron sulfate. It's a chemical known for centuries, and actually has had many names. Wikipedia lists: Ferrous sulfate; green vitriol; iron vitriol; copperas; melanterite; szomolnokite Note that the "oil of vitriol" was the name alchemists gave to sulfuric acid; when you dissolve iron into sulfuric acid, you get this salt. You can read more about it at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron%28II%29_sulfate
The basic copper carbonate is known in mineralogy as malachite or azurite.
copper has a smell unique to copper that is often described as sweet. smell being an olifactory sense and subjective to individual perspective i recomend getting a penny that predates 1992 and smelling it for yourself.
formula : cuso4 chemical name: copper sulphate
Blue vitriol is the obsolete name of copper(II) sulfate - CuSO4.
You can not. Blue Vitriol is the old fashioned name for Copper Sulfate and they are thus the same chemical.
Iron (II)Sulfate - FeSO4.7H2O
Blue vitriol is an obsolete name for copper(II) sulphate - CuSO4.
The name of the compound with the formula Cu2SO4 is Copper I sulphate or Cuprous sulphate.
Oil of Vitriol (also known as sulfuric acid) is mainly used for car batteries, ore processing, fertilizer manufacturing, oil refining, wastewater processing and chemical synthesis. But the main use is in car batteries. The chemical formula of oil of vitriol is H2SO4.Source: Wickipedia
From Wikipedia:Copper(II) sulfate is the chemical compound with the formula CuSO4. This salt exists as a series of compounds that differ in their degree of hydration. The anhydrous form is a pale green or gray-white powder, whereas the pentahydrate, the most commonly encountered salt, is bright blue. The anhydrous form occurs as a rare mineral known as chalcocyanite. The hydrated copper sulfate occurs in nature as chalcanthite (pentahydrate), and two more rare ones: bonattite (trihydrate) and boothite (heptahydrate). Archaic names for copper(II) sulfate are "blue vitriol" and "bluestone".[1]
There are many different oils, but they are largely non-polar so it's unlikely that an ionic compound such as copper sulfate (blue vitriol) will dissolve in any of them to any appreciable extent.
blue vitriol or copper sulfate pentahydrate is used as a fungicide, pesticide and herbicide. its medical use is an emetic but it is toxic.
This is copper(II) pentahydrate or cupric sulfate or blue vitriol.
Blue vitriol is the old fashioned name for Copper Sulfate - so there is copper, sulfur and oxygen present