CuCO3 is bluish-greenish-white. If it is heated to a high enough temperature, it will decompose into Carbon Dioxide and Copper II Oxide, which is black.
The colour of copper(II) oxide is black, while that of copper(I) oxide is red. The green colour you see on the Statue of Liberty is because carbon dioxide in the air reacted with the copper to produce copper(II) carbonate, which is greenish-blue.
Because it undergoes thermal decomposition. If you give heat to Copper (II) carbonate, it will decompose to form Copper (II) oxide. Instead of saying green copper carbonate, I guess it is safer and better to say copper (II) carbonate.
when blue Copper sulphate is heated, it loses its water part of crystallisation and tuns into white, anhydrous copper sulphate crystal
Copper(II) hydroxide and sodium nitrate are thermally decomposed to oxides by heating.
you make a black precipitate.
when carbonate is heated lyperdermus thiosulfate kindogranite maglesemium magnesium gindopickranate is formed.
This compound is the copper(II) oxide, CuO.
By filtration, as Copper(II) carbonate is insoluble
copper(II) carbonate or cupric carbonate
The colour of copper(II) oxide is black, while that of copper(I) oxide is red. The green colour you see on the Statue of Liberty is because carbon dioxide in the air reacted with the copper to produce copper(II) carbonate, which is greenish-blue.
Because it undergoes thermal decomposition. If you give heat to Copper (II) carbonate, it will decompose to form Copper (II) oxide. Instead of saying green copper carbonate, I guess it is safer and better to say copper (II) carbonate.
copper (II) carbonate is a solid
Copper(II) Carbonate (or Cupric Carbonate) is made up of Copper ions, and Carbonate ions. The coppers have a +2 charge, and carbonate has a -2 charge. The formula is Cu(II)CO3
Some examples are copper(II) sulfate, copper(I) chloride, copper(II) chloride, copper(II) carbonate.
Copper carbonate would precipitate if you combined solutions of copper (II) chloride and sodium carbonate.
copper (I) carbonate The carbonate ion has a -2 charge. Since the formula given is Cu2CO3, it indicates there are 2 Cu atoms required to fulfill the carbonate ion's needs. This means the Cu ion must be of the Cu+1 species.
Copper (II) Carbonate