Co2+ + 2SO4
While many compounds containing sulfate are soluble, barium sulfate is one of the exceptions. When you put it in water, nothing happens.
Nothing will happen. Displacement reaction only happens when the element is more reactive than the salt solution. An example will be the otherwise. If you put aluminum metal into a solution of Copper (II) Sulfate. The aluminum metal will displace copper metal and you will have a solution of Aluminum Sulfate and copper metal. As long the element you put into the salt solution is more reactive than the cation of the solution, it will displace the metal.
Yes. Iron is more reactive than copper, so will displace it from a compound. If you put a piece of iron into copper sulfate solution, it will be soon coated with a deposit of orangey red copper.CuSO4 + Fe --> FeSO4 + Cu
Copper sulphate is soluble, sulphur is insoluble. Dissolve the mixture in water. The copper sulphate will dissolve, the sulphur will not dissolve. Filter. The blue soluble of copper sulphate will passthrough the filter paper. The sulphur (yellow) will remain in the filter paper.
The evidence to see are 1. has no colour or smell 2. will put out a lit splint
When potassium sulfate is added to water, it dissociates into potassium ions (K+) and sulfate ions (SO4^2-). This process is called dissociation or ionization.
This compound is soluble in water.
When cobalt II fluoride is put into water, it will dissociate into its ions: Co^2+ and F-. The reaction can be represented as CoF2 (s) โ Co^2+ (aq) + 2F- (aq).
Any reaction occur when gold is put in copper sulfate.
The reversible chemical reaction for the heating of hydrated copper sulfate (CuSO4ยท5H2O) is: CuSO4ยท5H2O (blue) โ CuSO4 (white) + 5H2O The blue hydrated copper sulfate loses its water molecules when heated to form white anhydrous copper sulfate and water molecules are released. This reaction is reversible, meaning the white anhydrous copper sulfate can regain water molecules to reform the blue hydrated copper sulfate under appropriate conditions.
When nickel sulfate is put into water, it dissociates into its ions - nickel (II) ions and sulfate ions. These ions then interact with water molecules through hydration to form a homogeneous solution.
While many compounds containing sulfate are soluble, barium sulfate is one of the exceptions. When you put it in water, nothing happens.
Since selenium is a metalloid, and nitrogen is a nonmetal, the normal convention would require us to put nitrogen at the end, not the beginning. Se4N4 is a highly explosive compound called selenium nitride. Other forms of selenium nitride also exist, with different ratios of selenium to nitrogen.
When you put copper sulfate in water, it will dissolve and dissociate into copper ions (Cu2+) and sulfate ions (SO4 2-). This process creates a blue-colored solution due to the presence of copper ions in the water.
you can put cheese in it and then drink it
Yes, it is true.
Any reaction occur; sucrose is dissolved in water.