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.
The colour of anhydrous copper sulphatecrystals are WHITE.
They can be used to detect the presence of water.
They turn BLUE if water is present, forming hydrated copper sulphate.
The water solution of copper sulfates is blue color.
i dno possibly the colour of the sky on a good day, sky blue!
Copper sulphide is not soluble at all. Copper solutions are usually blue.
If it is hydrated it is blue, if it isn't hydrated it is white.
It is most often found as copper sulfate hexahydrate, which is blue.
Copper sulphate is white when anhydrous. It is blue when hydrated.
blue
pink
blue
aqueous copper sulphate having high conductive hydroxide ions were as no in solid Copper sulphate.
There are two products that will give flame a green color. Boric acid and copper sulfate. Copper sulfate is the salt, however.
The Zinc will displace the copper. It will become Zinc Sulphate. The word equation will be Zinc + Copper Sulphate -----> Copper + Zinc Sulphate. Hope this helps!
zinc is more reactive than copper hence it displaces the copper in copper sulphate solution to become zinc sulphate and copper metal is formed
No, zinc will displace copper from copper sulphate but not the other way around.
Copper sulphate's colour is blue.
Copper (II) sulphate is a salt that is blue.
Sulfate/Sulphate dissolved in water is blue in color. That's COPPER sulphate; there are many other sulphates which have many different colours, or are colourless.
The copper sulfate dissolves and turns into a royal-blue color.
Copper Sulphate usually is found in a hydrated form (i.e., water molecules are incorporated into the crystals.) Pure copper sulphate is a pale, greenish gray color. The familiar blue color only occurs in hydrates of copper sulphate (i.e., in crystals that incorporate H20 molecules). Heating the blue crystals can drive off the water. It's still called copper sulphate after you do that. For substances like copper sulphate that naturally attract water, the adjective, anhydrous often is used to describe the pure (water free) state. If you heat copper sulphate to a temperature of 650C, it will decompose into something else. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_sulphate
orange-red
Blue...but you could just google this in google images...??
it is like the color but gold more
Copper Sulphate mixed with hot water makes Copper Sulphate Crystals.
calcium + copper sulphate = calcium sulphate + copper hydroxide
aqueous copper sulphate having high conductive hydroxide ions were as no in solid Copper sulphate.
Calcium Sulphate + Copper