Someone please help!!!!
The Roman numeral II in Copper II denotes the oxidation state of copper, which is +2. This indicates that copper in the compound has lost two electrons and has a 2+ charge.
Copper (II) Bromide
Dont know what is CuSO. But CuSO4 is copper sulphate..
Some examples are copper(II) sulfate, copper(I) chloride, copper(II) chloride, copper(II) carbonate.
copper (II) hypobromite
You can separate unreacted copper II carbonate from aqueous copper II chloride by filtration. The copper II carbonate is insoluble in water, so it can be filtered out using a filter paper. The aqueous copper II chloride solution can then be collected separately.
This compound is copper(II) nitrate.
The color of the precipitate formed when copper(II) hydroxide decomposes to copper(II) oxide is black. When heated, the greenish-blue copper(II) hydroxide decomposes into black copper(II) oxide, which is the color of the precipitate.
Yes, the copper(II) acetate is a copper salt.
Copper II fluoride is CuF2
The chemical compound name for CuI2 is copper(II) iodide. It is composed of copper ions with a +2 oxidation state and iodide ions.
Copper(I) bromide is CuBr. Copper(II) bromide is CuBr2