Copper(II) sulfate is CuSO4, and it is an ionic compound, with ionic bonds between the Cu^2+ and the SO4^2-. The bonds that make up the SO4^2- are, however covalent bonds.
The name of the compound with the formula Cu2SO4 is Copper I sulphate or Cuprous sulphate.
Yes, copper sulphate can dissolve in water. When added to water, copper sulphate dissociates into copper ions (Cu2+) and sulphate ions (SO4 2-), forming a blue-colored solution.
The valency of copper in copper sulfate (CuSO4) is +2. This means that copper has a charge of +2 in this compound and it forms ionic bonds with the sulfate ion.
When copper sulphate is added to water, it dissociates into copper ions (Cu2+) and sulphate ions (SO4 2-). This forms a blue-colored solution due to the presence of copper ions in the water.
In the balanced equation CuSO4 + 2NaOH โ Cu(OH)2 + Na2SO4, copper sulfate (CuSO4) is a reactant. It reacts with sodium hydroxide (NaOH) to form copper hydroxide (Cu(OH)2) and sodium sulphate (Na2SO4).
The name of the compound with the formula Cu2SO4 is Copper I sulphate or Cuprous sulphate.
The valency of copper in copper sulfate (CuSO4) is +2. This means that copper has a charge of +2 in this compound and it forms ionic bonds with the sulfate ion.
copper+sulphur+oxygen then theres an arrow, but i don't know how 2 do an arrow copper sulphate
the answer is..... 2
a big lump of mess i dont think so copper sulphate +sodium hydroxide = Na2So4 +Cu(OH)2 WHICH IS SODIUM SULPHATE AND COPPER HYDROXIDE
when blue Copper sulphate is heated, it loses its water part of crystallisation and tuns into white, anhydrous copper sulphate crystal
Noob
1. Increase the temperature of the water. 2. Use copper sulphate in the finely powered form instead of copper sulphate crystals (if hydrated). 3. Stir.
Copper hydroxide is an ionic compound. Although, it has covalent bonds in the hydroxyl ion itself.
Copper sulfate is not typically used as a catalyst in the reaction between zinc and hydrochloric acid. The reaction between zinc and hydrochloric acid is a single displacement reaction where zinc displaces hydrogen from hydrochloric acid to form zinc chloride and hydrogen gas. In this reaction, the presence of copper sulfate would not act as a catalyst to speed up the reaction.
The reaction between sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and copper (Cu) results in the formation of copper sulfate (CuSO4) and water (H2O). This is an acid-base reaction where the sulfuric acid acts as the acid, donating a proton to copper to form copper sulfate.
Copper(II) sulphate is written like this because here II denotes the oxidation state of copper or in simple language, it denotes its valency.Copper sometimes shows +1 valency and sometimes +2.So to specify, its valency in a compound, the valency is written in brackets.