Copper is a solid at room temperature, that being said, if heated to its melting point, copper will become a liquid.
copper that has been melted into a liquid-like state
no it does not other wise pennies would be liquid! :-)
Copper is solid at room temperature.
It's a solid.
This solution is a liquid.
Heat the liquid to boil off excess water and the copper nitrate will crystalise out of the solution as it cools. Then filter to separate the crystals from the liquid.
It would be a liquid at 2000 oC.
carbon monoxide copper and liquid nitrogen
you get a blue lumpy liquid. copper sulphate + sodium hydroxide -> copper hydroxide + sodium sulphate.
"Liquid Copper" is many different things. Look it up on the internets.
No. Copper(I) chloride and copper(II) chloride are both ionic solids.
This solution is a liquid.
Copper melts at 1084.62 °C.
No, not liquid (mercury is the only liquid metal known) Yes, it is a metal!
animal
No. Copper is a solid at room temperature.
Dissolve the sulphur in carbon disulphide and pour the liquid off the copper. Evaporate the liquid to yield the sulphur.
Well soluble means able to dissolve so soluble copper is copper that dissolves in a solvent (liquid)
To separate copper from its ore, the process is called smelting. The copper and ore are heated and the copper turns to liquid which is then poured from the smelter.
Heat the liquid to boil off excess water and the copper nitrate will crystalise out of the solution as it cools. Then filter to separate the crystals from the liquid.
It is moving on from the solid to a liquid, a bit like plasma, but the closest you could say is a hot liquid.