If it is in very dilute quantities then it shouldn't be. However copper sulphate is listed as a halmful substance and a possible irritant, so it is not something you want your livestock to be injesting
If it is in very dilute quantities then it shouldn't be. However copper sulphate is listed as a halmful substance and a possible irritant, so it is not something you want your livestock to be injesting
No...Copper sulfate in crystal form will dissolve in water/sweat at very low temps and can sometimes be an irritant to skin.
Copper sulfate has CuSO4 as its formula. Copper sulfate is also written copper (II) sulfate.
Copper sulfate has CuSO4 as its formula. Copper sulfate is also written copper (II) sulfate.
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.
Copper sulfate is not black. Combined with water, as hydrated copper sulfate, it is blue. Without water, as anhydrous copper sulfate, it is white.
Copper(I) sulfate is Cu2SO4: the ratio Cu/SO4 is 2.
copper sulfate, cupric sulfate, cupric sulphate.l
its the powdered copper sulfate crystals :)
Copper(I) sulfate is Cu2SO4 .
No. Copper sulfate is a compound.
a copper sulfate solution it becomes copper (II) sulfate pentahydrate