No, it has ionic bonds.
In copper sulfate (CuSO4), the polyatomic ion is SO4^2-, which is covalently bonded. The copper ion (Cu) is not part of the polyatomic ion and is ionically bonded to the sulfate ion.
In the compound copper sulfate CuSO4, the SO4 (sulfate) part is a covalently bonded polyatomic ion. The Cu (copper) part is not a polyatomic ion; it is an individual copper atom.
Copper sulfate is a compound, not a mixture. It is composed of copper, sulfur, and oxygen elements chemically bonded in a fixed ratio.
In copper carbonate (CuCO3), the carbonate ion (CO3^2-) is a covalently bonded polyatomic ion. The copper atom is not part of the polyatomic ion in this compound and is ionically bonded to the carbonate ion.
Freon is more covalently bonded. It consists of covalent bonds between the carbon, fluorine, and chlorine atoms in its structure.
Copper Sulphate (check your spelling) is a chemical compound. It can only be separated by chemical change, not by physical change. Therefore, it is not a mixture.
Copper sulphate crystals form when a hot saturated solution of copper sulphate is cooled down. As the solution cools, the solubility of copper sulphate decreases, causing the excess copper sulphate to come out of the solution and form crystals.
Yes
Yes
An ionic compound is more soluble than a covalently bonded compound.
The Zinc will displace the copper. It will become Zinc Sulphate. The word equation will be Zinc + Copper Sulphate -----> Copper + Zinc Sulphate. Hope this helps!
A covalently bonded group of three amino acids is called a tripeptide.