The molecules of copper sulphate solution mixes with the water molecules due to diffusion thereby making the water blue.
The solution of CuSO4 is blue.The solution of FeSO4 is green.
Molarity = moles of solute(CuSO4)/volume of solution(Liters) 0.967 grams CuSO4 (1 mole CuSO4/159.62 grams) = 0.00606 moles CuSO4 Molarity = 0.00606 moles/0.020 liters = 0.303 Molarity
boil it thats it
Evaporating a copper sulphate solution you can obtain anhydrous crystals of CuSO4. Increasing the temperature CuSO4 will be thermally dissociated.
Not completely sure what you're asking, but copper sulfate (CuSO4) will dissolve easily in water to form a cool-looking blue colored solution.(The term is dissolve).
Iron is more reactive than copper and the ferrous (Fe++) ions will replace the copper (Cu++) ions in the sulphate. CuSO4 is blue, FeSO4 is green.
The solution of CuSO4 is blue.The solution of FeSO4 is green.
CuSO4 is a salt of weak base(copper hydroxide) and strong acid(sulphuric acid)....the Ph of the solution of cuso4 will be acidic....
Blue
Molarity = moles of solute(CuSO4)/volume of solution(Liters) 0.967 grams CuSO4 (1 mole CuSO4/159.62 grams) = 0.00606 moles CuSO4 Molarity = 0.00606 moles/0.020 liters = 0.303 Molarity
solution
boil it thats it
it may be CuSO4 solution...
16.67
copper sulphate - CUSO4 (copper+sulphur)
Evaporating a copper sulphate solution you can obtain anhydrous crystals of CuSO4. Increasing the temperature CuSO4 will be thermally dissociated.
i think i need to holler at me