Sulfuric acid react with copper.
Copper does not react with dilute Sulphuric acid.
Copper Oxide reacts with Sulphuric acid to form Copper Sulphate and Water.
When dilute sulphuric acid is added to copper oxide, a chemical reaction occurs, resulting in the formation of copper sulfate and water. The reaction can be represented by the equation: CuO + H2SO4 → CuSO4 + H2O.
When copper reacts with dilute sulphuric acid, copper sulfate and hydrogen gas are produced. The copper sulfate formed will be a blue solution. This reaction is a redox reaction, where copper is oxidized and hydrogen is reduced.
When copper oxide is added into excess dilute sulphuric acid, it reacts to form copper sulfate and water. Additionally, hydrogen gas is evolved during the reaction.
When excess copper oxide is added to dilute sulfuric acid, the excess copper oxide will react with the acid to form copper sulfate and water. The reaction will continue until all the copper oxide is used up. This is known as a limiting reactant situation, where one reactant is completely consumed before the other.
cu + H2so4 --->cuso4+2H two molecules of hydrogen evolves........
When dilute sulfuric acid is poured on a copper plate, a chemical reaction occurs where the sulfuric acid reacts with the copper to form copper sulfate, water, and sulfur dioxide gas. This reaction will cause the copper plate to dissolve and create a blue-green solution of copper sulfate. Heat and bubbles may also be observed as the reaction takes place.
H2SO4(dilute)
No. It is a mixture of sulphuric acid and water.
Cu does not reacts with dilute sulphuric acid but concentrated sulphuric acid reacts with copper inpresence of oxygen and heat here last two factors are responsible for the reaction of copper.
It depends, if the susexphuri acid is of a high concentration and is hot, then the copper plate will react and dissolve. sex though it is not a strongly oxidizing acid, hot concentrated sulfuric acid is a strong enough oxidizing agent to dissolve copper.