copper sulphate and carbon dioxide
If you add copper carbonate to sulphuric acid, you will form copper(II) sulfate, which is a salt that is commonly used in agricultural and chemical processes. This reaction also releases carbon dioxide gas as a byproduct.
There are many salts made from sulphuric acid. A chemical salt consists of any given metal, and the acid anion. In the case of Sulphuric Acid, the acid anion is the sulphate anion ' SO4^(2-) ' This can combine with many different metals, e.g. sodium, calcium , copper, to form the salts, respectively, sodium sulphate (Na2SO4), calcium sulphate(CaSO4), copper sulphate(CuSO4). There are many other combinations.
When copper (ii) oxide is mixed with sulphuric acid it produces copper (ii) sulphate. CuO + H2SO4 = CuSO4 + H2O
Copper sulfate is the salt formed when copper oxide and sulfuric acid react together.
Sulfuric acid is commonly used to make copper sulfate through a reaction with copper oxide.
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Copper sulfate is formed when copper oxide reacts with sulfuric acid.
Copper is an inert metal and below hydrogen in electro chemical series therefore can not displaced hydrogen from acids so copper can not be converted directly to salts by reacting with acids, however concentrated sulphuric acid reacts with copper on heating in presence of atmospheric oxygen forming the copper sulphate, chlorides and other salts are prepared from its sulphate salt.
Copper carbonate is made up of the elements copper, carbon, and oxygen.
Sulphuric acid
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chlorene