yes it does the carbon dioxide is supposed to be heated up copper carbonate
No, carbon dioxide is not present in copper sulfate. Copper sulfate is composed of copper, sulfur, and oxygen atoms, not carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is a molecule composed of carbon and oxygen atoms.
Carbon + Copper oxide -> Copper + Carbon dioxide
Copper doesn't react with carbon dioxide at room temperature.
copper is a metal and carbon dioxide is a gas so therefore dont mix
Copper carbonate and sulfuric acid react to produce copper sulfate, carbon dioxide gas, and water.
Copper Carbonate when heated decomposes to give copper oxide and carbon dioxide.
It is possible for carbon dioxide and copper oxide to encourage a reaction to take place due to thermal composition. When calcium carbonate is heated, it decomposes and generates carbon dioxide and copper oxide.
When copper carbonate decomposes, it produces carbon dioxide gas along with copper oxide as a residue.
Copper oxide reacts with carbon dioxide to form copper carbonate. This reaction can be represented by the chemical equation: CuO + CO2 -> CuCO3.
Heating copper oxide with carbon (in the form of coal or charcoal) causes a reduction reaction, where carbon removes oxygen from copper oxide to produce carbon dioxide and leave behind pure copper. This process is known as a reduction reaction, where carbon acts as a reducing agent to extract copper from its oxide form.
CuCO3 ---> CO2 + CuO which is copper oxide
copper sulphate and carbon dioxide