It is a compound that is made up of carbon, copper and oxygen. The "ate" in carbonate stands for oxygen.
CuS is known as copper(II) sulphide or Cupric sulphide.
Copper Carbonate
Copper carbonate is a solid compound at room temperature.
When copper(II) carbonate is heated, it decomposes to form copper(II) oxide and carbon dioxide. The ionic compound that remains is copper(II) oxide, which has the chemical formula CuO.
Copper(II) carbonate is an ionic compound. It is composed of copper(II) cations (Cu^2+) and carbonate anions (CO3^2-), which are held together by ionic bonds formed through the transfer of electrons between the elements.
CuS is known as copper(II) sulphide or Cupric sulphide.
Copper Carbonate
The compound you are referring to is copper carbonate, which has the chemical formula CuCO3. It is also known as copper(II) carbonate and is commonly found in nature as the mineral malachite.
Copper carbonate is a solid compound at room temperature.
When copper(II) carbonate is heated, it decomposes to form copper(II) oxide and carbon dioxide. The ionic compound that remains is copper(II) oxide, which has the chemical formula CuO.
Copper(II) carbonate is an ionic compound. It is composed of copper(II) cations (Cu^2+) and carbonate anions (CO3^2-), which are held together by ionic bonds formed through the transfer of electrons between the elements.
You can separate unreacted copper II carbonate from aqueous copper II chloride by filtration. The copper II carbonate is insoluble in water, so it can be filtered out using a filter paper. The aqueous copper II chloride solution can then be collected separately.
it is carbon and 2 oxygen atoms a.k.a carbon dioxide
The chemical formula of copper (II) carbonate is CuCO3.
Copper carbonate is CuCO3 (copper(II) carbonate)
copper (III) chloride Added: It is very unlikely that CuCl3 exists: The only two possible oxidation states of copper are I (cuprous, Cu+) and II (cupric, Cu2+) and if it doesn't exist then it has also NO name! Correction on the above. It does exists it is just very unstable and will switch back to Cu(II)Cl2 it is used to create the Cu(I)Cl because it is very unstable in the Cu(I)Cl and will easily form into the copper 2
No, CuSO4 (copper(II) sulfate) is not a mixture. It is a chemical compound composed of copper, sulfur, and oxygen atoms in a fixed ratio. A mixture is a combination of two or more substances that are not chemically combined.