Water must be colorless.
It is a compound that is made up of carbon, copper and oxygen. The "ate" in carbonate stands for oxygen.
Copper(II) carbonate is insoluble in water and doesn't react with sodium sulfate. A green product, visible on ald objects made from copper or copper alloys, is a mixture of copper carbonate and copper hydroxide.
hydrogen
Copper and carbonate ions form copper carbonate. In practice, copper carbonate usually contains hydroxide ions as well.
The copper(III) carbonate is a precipitate.
1. Dissolve the copper carbonate/sulfate salts in water and filter it: the Copper Carbonate is insoluble so it will remain as the residue on the filter paper, and the copper sulfate is soluble so it will pass through the paper as the filtrate. 2. Heat the filtrate in an evaporating basin till the point of crystallization (crystals will form on a rod dipped into the mixture, at the point of crystallization). 3. Leave the filtrate to cool and crystals of pure Copper sulfate will form. Collect the crystals with a spatula and leave them on a sheet of filter paper to dry.
It is a compound that is made up of carbon, copper and oxygen. The "ate" in carbonate stands for oxygen.
NO!
Copper(II) carbonate is insoluble in water and doesn't react with sodium sulfate. A green product, visible on ald objects made from copper or copper alloys, is a mixture of copper carbonate and copper hydroxide.
yes
with a single displacement reaction
no hidro means water
hydrogen
Copper Carbonate.
copper(II) carbonate or cupric carbonate
yes it as it forms a new substance
Copper and carbonate ions form copper carbonate. In practice, copper carbonate usually contains hydroxide ions as well.