No reaction occurs
You would add powdered copper carbonate to dilute hydrochloric acid to produce copper chloride solution and carbon dioxide gas.
Adding an excess of copper carbonate ensures that all the sulfuric acid is fully neutralized and reacts with the copper carbonate to form copper sulfate. This guarantees that the maximum amount of copper sulfate is produced during the reaction.
If you add copper carbonate to sulphuric acid, you will form copper(II) sulfate, which is a salt that is commonly used in agricultural and chemical processes. This reaction also releases carbon dioxide gas as a byproduct.
When copper sulfate is added to water, it dissolves to form a blue colored solution. This solution can be used for various applications, such as a fungicide in agricultural settings or as an ingredient in electrolyte solutions.
When water is added to copper sulfate, the copper sulfate dissolves in water to form a blue-colored solution. This is a physical change as the copper sulfate molecules remain unchanged, only dispersing evenly in the water.
sodium carbonate + copper sulfate ===> copper carbonate (s) + sodium sulfateNa2CO3(aq) + CuSO4(aq) ===> CuCO3(s) + Na2SO4(aq)
You would add powdered copper carbonate to dilute hydrochloric acid to produce copper chloride solution and carbon dioxide gas.
Adding an excess of copper carbonate ensures that all the sulfuric acid is fully neutralized and reacts with the copper carbonate to form copper sulfate. This guarantees that the maximum amount of copper sulfate is produced during the reaction.
when the carbonate is heated in absence of air then the CO2 is produced as the byproduct .
If you add copper carbonate to sulphuric acid, you will form copper(II) sulfate, which is a salt that is commonly used in agricultural and chemical processes. This reaction also releases carbon dioxide gas as a byproduct.
Any reaction occur.
When copper sulfate is added to water, it dissolves to form a blue colored solution. This solution can be used for various applications, such as a fungicide in agricultural settings or as an ingredient in electrolyte solutions.
When water is added to copper sulfate, the copper sulfate dissolves in water to form a blue-colored solution. This is a physical change as the copper sulfate molecules remain unchanged, only dispersing evenly in the water.
When you add potassium carbonate to cobalt chloride, a double displacement reaction occurs. Potassium carbonate reacts with cobalt chloride to form potassium chloride and cobalt carbonate. The cobalt carbonate will likely precipitate out of solution as a solid.
The mass of water does not increase when copper sulfate is added to the water, unless the copper sulfate is hydrated. The mass of the mixture of water and copper sulfate, of course, does increase.
If you add calcium carbonate to 100g of water at 25oC, only 0.0014g of it will dissolve. Additional calcium carbonate will not dissolve.
CuCO3 + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + CO2 + H2O As this reaction shows just add copper carbonate crystals to a solution of sulfuric acid of diluted concentration. Carbon dioxide should efferves from this solution. I can not remember if the copper sulfate precipitates here, or is in ionized form.