copper is an element meaning it is pure. it has 29 elecrons, 29 protons, and 34.5 neutrons.
Copper is an element.
There are copper alloys that are mixtures of copper and other elements.
copper is a whole substance.... it has no components
Copper is an element, not a compound.
Copper iodide has the elements Copper x 1 Iodine x 2 The formula is CuI2
The elements in copper sulphate are copper, sulphur and oxygen. Copper sulphate is a compound, made up of three elements. The symbol for this compound is CuS04.
Copper NitrateMolecular Formula: (CuNO3)2 No. of Elements: Three: Copper (Cu), Nitrogen (N), and Oxygen (O).
Copper can be combined with other elements to form alloys. Copper is melted down and additional elements are added in a desired ratio. For example zinc can be added to copper to form brass alloy. If tin is added to copper you make bronze. The trick is to heat the copper to a point where another element can be absorbed into the copper. Depending on the material you are trying to mix with the copper it will be brought in at the atomic level (like salt in water) or will form something like a suspension (muddy water)If you want me to get more descriptive on how the thermal chemistry works and what happens in the crystalline structure feel free to say so. Tried to keep it simple. Hope this helps
Copper sulfate (CuSO4) has 6 atoms and 3 chemical elements.
Copper iodide has the elements Copper x 1 Iodine x 2 The formula is CuI2
copper and oxygen
Copper Sulfur Tetraoxygen
Alloy
Because copper is considered an element, and because elements do not include other elements, copper only contains copper.
The metals silver, copper and nickel are elements. It is brass that is an alloy, and copper and zinc are what make it up.
silver, copper. copper can be replaced by germanium, zinc, platinum
The coinage elements are the metals that are used to make coins. They are the three metals from Group 11 of the periodic table - copper, silver and gold.
Copper and aluminium are used for electric cables.
electrons, fundamental particles of matter
copper and mercury
Copper and zinc are not alloying elements for steels.