there is no reaction
No. All metal sulphate are soluble in water, except barium sulphate, calcium sulphate and lead sulphate.
The reaction is:Fe + PbSO4 = Pb + FeSO4
copper sulphate is soluble in water - take the reaction to form blue crystals (sulphuric acid + copper carbonate) - once the water is evaporated off blue crystals are left. And if the water is evaporated off still the crystals turn white! so it must be.
lead is soft and copper is hard
Lead II sulphate is PbSO4 Lead IV sulphate is Pb(SO4)2
Lead is less reactive than copper, so the sulphate ion would stay bound to the copper, so the answer is the same compounds as you started with.
No. All metal sulphate are soluble in water, except barium sulphate, calcium sulphate and lead sulphate.
No reaction between them
That was why i came here
Caledonite is a carbonate/sulphate mineral of copper and lead.
lead in copper sulfate is often used to make sulfuric acid by doing electronosis.
Pb(NO3)2 + Na2SO4 = PbSO4 + 2NaNO3 The lead sulfate is a white precipitate.
Silver is lower in the reactivity series than Zinc and therfore cannot displace the Sulphate from the Zinc. But on the other hand zinc is higher than copper, and when displacing the sulphate from the copper it changes colour due to the reaction. Reactivity series(metals): Potassium Sodium Lithium Calcium Magnesium Aluminium Zinc Iron Tin Lead Copper Silver Gold Platinum
Not realy.........
The reaction is:Fe + PbSO4 = Pb + FeSO4
copper sulphate is soluble in water - take the reaction to form blue crystals (sulphuric acid + copper carbonate) - once the water is evaporated off blue crystals are left. And if the water is evaporated off still the crystals turn white! so it must be.
lead is soft and copper is hard