With heat.
Only if the acid is above the melting point of copper. However, the copper might dissolve in acid if the acid is oxidizing. If it did, copper ions would be present in the solution formed, but there would not be an metallic copper in it.
melt the copper sulfate and see what appers
The energy required to melt 1 kg of copper at its melting point of about 1084°C is approximately 205 kJ. Therefore, to melt 2 kg of copper, you would need around 410 kJ of energy.
Copper melts at around 1984°F (1085°C), so it is unlikely that a copper coin would melt on a gas fire at 100°F (37.8°C) in 12 hours. The temperature would need to be significantly higher to melt copper.
It is possible to melt metals including copper. It requires a very high level of heat, depending on the metal.ADDED@ Not sure why that "and copper". Copper IS a metal.
Copper melts at 1084.62 C or 1984.316 F
No, copper is solid at room temperature.
Iridium can form alloys with copper.
No, wood cannot be used to melt copper because the temperature required to melt copper (1,984°F or 1,085°C) is much higher than the ignition point of wood (around 572°F or 300°C). To melt copper, a heat source such as a furnace or a torch that can reach the required temperature must be used.
Yes.
The use of fire, likely from pre-existing campfires, was probably the primary method used by Homo sapiens to melt copper for shaping into tools or ornaments. This would have required the ability to control and maintain a high enough temperature for the copper to melt and be molded into desired shapes.
copper, it wont melt or bend easilly