Copper(s)
Copper Oxide reacts with Sulphuric acid to form Copper Sulphate and Water.
Sulphuric acid is mixed with copper oxide to make copper sulphate through a chemical reaction.
Yes, Copper oxide does fizz when it reacts with Sulphuric Acid
This reaction is exothermic.
If you mean which elements are the same, both copper oxide (whichever valence state) and sulphuric acid contain Oxygen (H2SO4)
Copper sulfate is the salt formed when copper oxide and sulfuric acid react together.
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.
This will depend upon which version of copper oxide you have - copper I oxide or copper II oxide. For copper I oxide: H2SO4 + Cu2O --> Cu2SO4 + H2O For copper II oxide: H2SO4 + CuO --> CuSO4 + H2O
Copper oxide and sulfuric acid will react together to produce copper sulfate.
Copper oxide+ Sulphuric acid ----> copper sulphate +water
Cu + 2H2SO4 -> CuSO4 + 2H2O + SO2 Copper (Cu) on reacting with two moles of sulphuric acid (H2SO4) yields copper sulphate (CuSO4) and 2 moles of water (2H2O) and sulphur dioxide (SO2).
Copper sulfate is formed when copper oxide reacts with sulfuric acid.