The chemical formulas of copper sulfides are CuS and Cu2S. Copper sulfides are non-stoichiometric compounds.
Anhydrous meaning is without water. Copper sulfides hasn't hydrates.
The formula of anhydrous copper sulfate is CuSO4.
Anhydrous copper sulfate is CuSO4, while water is H2O. When anhydrous copper sulfate reacts with water, it forms hydrated copper sulfate, which is CuSO4·5H2O.
Anhydrous Copper sulfate has the chemical formula CuSO4.
Copper and Sulphur ONLY. Copper sulphide has the formula ' CuS'.
Anhydrous copper sulfate (CuSO4) is reversible in the sense that it can absorb water molecules from the environment to form hydrated copper sulfate. Conversely, hydrated copper sulfate can be heated to drive off the water molecules, regenerating anhydrous copper sulfate. This process is reversible as it involves only physical changes and not chemical reactions.
To remove color from copper sulfate using anhydrous, you can mix the anhydrous copper sulfate with a small amount of water to dissolve the compound. Then filter the solution to separate the insoluble impurities. Finally, evaporate the water to obtain anhydrous copper sulfate in its white color form.
Hydrated copper sulphate (CuSO4.5H2O) is BLUE Anhydrous copper sulphate (CuSO4) is white at any temperature.
yes
The chemical equation for smelting copper sulphide is: Cu2S (copper sulphide) + O2 (oxygen) → 2Cu (copper) + SO2 (sulfur dioxide). This reaction is typically carried out in a furnace at high temperatures.
The difference is that anhydrous copper(II) sulfate has no water of crystallisation. The anhydrous variant is a white solid while the hydrated variant is blue. Also, the chemical formula for hydrated copper(II) sulfate (or copper sulfate pentahydrate) is CuSO4.5H2O while that of the anhydrous one is CuSO4.
Copper sulfate itself is white/colorless when anhydrous. However, it's hygroscopic and the pentahydrate (the usual form) is blue... in fact, it's just about the same color as the sidebar over to the left there.
No, it's a salt.