It forms copper (I) oxide and copper (II) oxide, mostly the (II) oxide that is black.
If you talk about what color is emitted a green/turquoise when heated.
If in a oxygen-poor atmosphere it melts without oxidising.
When you mix copper and iron you will get Bronze
hell no i cant
Small quantities of Copper are added to Gold to produce Gold with a pink colour, known as Rose Gold (a.k.a. a kind of Pink!).
You get a really big explosion. Sulfur mixed with water is BANG!!!
Contacting the iron powder with an aqueous solution of copper (II) salts will produce a copper coating on iron powder: Iron is higher in the electromotive series than copper and therefore will displace copper from the solution, resulting in copper-coated iron and dissolved iron cations. When all of the surface of the iron powder has been coated with copper, the iron will stop reacting because it no longer has access to the copper ions in solution, the access of the iron being blocked by the layer of copper coating the remaining iron powder.
iron + copper sulphate ''goes to'' iron sulphate + copper
The iron will displace the copper as it is more reactive. here's the equation: iron + copper sulphate = iron sulphate +copper
iron sulphate will be created
Diffusion occurs - The particles of copper sulphate move between the particles iron because the particles are tiny and discrete.
The iron is higher in they reactivity scale than copper , Therefore the copper will be replaced by iron to make iron sulfate and copper by itself.
Small quantities of Copper are added to Gold to produce Gold with a pink colour, known as Rose Gold (a.k.a. a kind of Pink!).
No, copper is less reactive than iron.
You get a really big explosion. Sulfur mixed with water is BANG!!!
Since iron is a more active metal than copper, the iron would replace the copper in the copper sulfate, forming iron sulfate, and releasing elemental copper. The copper will not shape itself into a copper vessel, so eventually, the iron sulfate would leak out of the iron vessel, and eventually, if there is enough copper sulfate, the iron vessel will cease to exist.
Contacting the iron powder with an aqueous solution of copper (II) salts will produce a copper coating on iron powder: Iron is higher in the electromotive series than copper and therefore will displace copper from the solution, resulting in copper-coated iron and dissolved iron cations. When all of the surface of the iron powder has been coated with copper, the iron will stop reacting because it no longer has access to the copper ions in solution, the access of the iron being blocked by the layer of copper coating the remaining iron powder.
iron + copper sulphate ''goes to'' iron sulphate + copper
Iron is more reactive than copper.
Iron is more reactive than copper
The iron will displace the copper as it is more reactive. here's the equation: iron + copper sulphate = iron sulphate +copper