CuO + H2SO4 -> CuSO4 + H2O
copper sulfate and water produced
When copper oxide is added into excess dilute sulphuric acid, it reacts to form copper sulfate and water. Additionally, hydrogen gas is evolved during the reaction.
When excess copper oxide is added to dilute sulfuric acid, the excess copper oxide will react with the acid to form copper sulfate and water. The reaction will continue until all the copper oxide is used up. This is known as a limiting reactant situation, where one reactant is completely consumed before the other.
No, it cannot be prepared by this method under normal conditions. For preparing copper sulphate, copper should be added to the sulphate salt of a metal which is less reactive than copper like Mercury, silver and gold
When sulphuric acid is added to zinc granules , the gas produced is hydrogen gas. Zinc displaces hydrogen from sulphuric acid.
When dilute sulfuric acid is added to zinc, a chemical reaction occurs in which zinc reacts with the sulfuric acid to form zinc sulfate and hydrogen gas. The hydrogen gas is released as bubbles, and the zinc sulfate remains dissolved in the solution.
When copper oxide is added into excess dilute sulphuric acid, it reacts to form copper sulfate and water. Additionally, hydrogen gas is evolved during the reaction.
cu + H2so4 --->cuso4+2H two molecules of hydrogen evolves........
When excess copper oxide is added to dilute sulfuric acid, the excess copper oxide will react with the acid to form copper sulfate and water. The reaction will continue until all the copper oxide is used up. This is known as a limiting reactant situation, where one reactant is completely consumed before the other.
No, it cannot be prepared by this method under normal conditions. For preparing copper sulphate, copper should be added to the sulphate salt of a metal which is less reactive than copper like Mercury, silver and gold
(Cu)s + 2HNO3 --> Cu2+ + 2NO3- + (H2)gas
When sulphuric acid is added to zinc granules , the gas produced is hydrogen gas. Zinc displaces hydrogen from sulphuric acid.
Sulphuric acid, because "sulphuric" is what gives copper sulphate it's name
ironchloride and sulphuric acid
When dilute sulfuric acid is added to zinc, a chemical reaction occurs in which zinc reacts with the sulfuric acid to form zinc sulfate and hydrogen gas. The hydrogen gas is released as bubbles, and the zinc sulfate remains dissolved in the solution.
No, there is no reaction between copper & H2SO4 because according to reactivity series of metal hydrogen is more reactive than copper. Hence copper does not displace hydrogen from sulphuric acid..
When dilute hydrochloric acid is added to copper turnings, a chemical reaction occurs where the copper is oxidized by the acid to form copper(II) chloride and hydrogen gas is produced. The reaction can be represented by the equation: Cu + 2HCl → CuCl2 + H2.
The precipitate formed when dilute sulfuric acid is added to copper(II) carbonate is copper(II) sulfate. The reaction can be represented as follows: CuCO3 + H2SO4 -> CuSO4 + H2O + CO2