It can be disposed of as regular trash.
its the powdered copper sulfate crystals :)
Copper sulfate crystals are a compound, not an element. The compound is formed by combining copper, sulfur, and oxygen atoms.
Copper sulfate does not produce crystals. Copper (II) sulfate pentahydrate (CuSO4•5H2O) does. The formula units are attracted to each other and form a repeating lattice.
Yes, in a saturated copper sulfate solution.
yes
its the powdered copper sulfate crystals :)
Copper sulfate in the solid form are crystals
Heating the saturated solution of Copper sulfate will not form the hydrated copper sulfate crystals because only after cooling down the saturated solution of copper sulfate then only the crystals of the hydrated copper sulfate can be formed
Copper sulfate crystals are a compound, not an element. The compound is formed by combining copper, sulfur, and oxygen atoms.
Copper sulfate would crystalize as blue crystals, water would evaporate. To get the copper sulfate itself to evaporate you would need to heat it, melting the dry crystals then vaporizing them.
Copper sulfate does not produce crystals. Copper (II) sulfate pentahydrate (CuSO4•5H2O) does. The formula units are attracted to each other and form a repeating lattice.
Yes, in a saturated copper sulfate solution.
yes
melt the copper sulfate and see what appers
Copper sulfate crystals remain in the container.
The percentage of water in copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate is 36,04 %.
Well the formula is CuSO4