Copper sulfate is not a metal There are two compounds called Copper Sulfate, which are salts of the metal Copper. CuSO4 is Copper (II) Sulfate, once known as Cupric Sulfate. Cu2SO4 is Copper (I) Sulfate, once known as Cuprous Sulfate.
Yes. The magnesium metal replaces the copper in the copper sulfate. This is a single replacement or single displacement reaction.
= Copper and Ferrous sulfate
iron + copper sulphate ''goes to'' iron sulphate + copper
Nothing will happen. Displacement reaction only happens when the element is more reactive than the salt solution. An example will be the otherwise. If you put aluminum metal into a solution of Copper (II) Sulfate. The aluminum metal will displace copper metal and you will have a solution of Aluminum Sulfate and copper metal. As long the element you put into the salt solution is more reactive than the cation of the solution, it will displace the metal.
The iron which is a more electrochemically active metal gets plated with copper and iron sulfate is formed
Copper can be obtained from copper sulfate solution by electroplating it onto an electrode or by adding a metal higher in the electromotive series than copper, such as iron, to the solution. The more active metal will dissolve by displacing copper in metallic form from the copper sulfate.
Yes. The magnesium metal replaces the copper in the copper sulfate. This is a single replacement or single displacement reaction.
Copper sulfate is an ionic bond. This is because copper is a metal, and oxygen and sulfur are non metals.
Under some circumstances some metals such as zinc can be oxidized by copper sulfate.
= Copper and Ferrous sulfate
The "excess" metallic copper produced by adding zinc metal to a copper sulfate solution comes from exchanging zinc atoms from the metal for copper atoms from the copper sulfate solution. During the reaction, the zinc atoms are ionized to cations and the copper cations from the solution are reduced to neutral atoms.
Copper sulfate is an ionic bond. This is because copper is a metal, and oxygen and sulfur are non metals.
iron + copper sulphate ''goes to'' iron sulphate + copper
Copper Sulfate has an ionic bond because copper is a metal and sulfur is a nonmetal.
Nothing will happen. Displacement reaction only happens when the element is more reactive than the salt solution. An example will be the otherwise. If you put aluminum metal into a solution of Copper (II) Sulfate. The aluminum metal will displace copper metal and you will have a solution of Aluminum Sulfate and copper metal. As long the element you put into the salt solution is more reactive than the cation of the solution, it will displace the metal.
No one person is credited with the discovery of CuSO4, or copper sulfate. This compound is made through the treatment of copper metal with sulfuric acid. Copper sulfate is a salt.
The iron which is a more electrochemically active metal gets plated with copper and iron sulfate is formed