Using cupric oxide (CuO, copper(II) oxide), a black powder, it will make hydrated copper sulfate (CuSO4.5H2O -blue crystals) anything left over is simply un-reacted chemical. As the excess water evaporates and if heated it will make anhydrous copper sulfate (CuSO4) a white powder.
When copper (ii) oxide is mixed with sulphuric acid it produces copper (ii) sulphate. CuO + H2SO4 = CuSO4 + H2O
Copper sulfate is the salt formed when copper oxide and sulfuric acid react together.
Sulfuric acid is commonly used to make copper sulfate through a reaction with copper oxide.
Copper sulfate is formed when copper oxide reacts with sulfuric acid.
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.
No.
copper sulphate and carbon dioxide
When copper (ii) oxide is mixed with sulphuric acid it produces copper (ii) sulphate. CuO + H2SO4 = CuSO4 + H2O
Copper sulfate is the salt formed when copper oxide and sulfuric acid react together.
Sulfuric acid is commonly used to make copper sulfate through a reaction with copper oxide.
Copper sulfate is formed when copper oxide reacts with sulfuric acid.
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.
Copper carbonate is made up of the elements copper, carbon, and oxygen.
sodium, potassium, copper, ammonium, magnesium, etc. sulfates
H2SO4 + MgCO3 --> H2O + CO2+ MgSO4 water, carbondioxide gas and magnesium sulfate are the three products
Any thing ending in sulfate e.g. calcium sulfate, copper sulfate
Copper sulfate (CuSO4) is not a binary compound of copper and sulfur but a compound of copper, sulfur, and oxygen. It can be made by electrolysis of copper with sulfuric acid: Cu + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + H2