there are so many such compounds but common are the compounds of Cu+2 ion.
Carbon Sulphate + Sodium Chloride
Copper Sulphate!
copper sulfate
sugar :)
caseroll
A solution is a mixture of any two substances, usually a liquid. Copper sulphate and water is a solution. There are many other solutions as well. Water and milk is a solution, mixing chemicals. Any mix of materials is technically a solution.
Starch.
The Benedict solution contain copper(II) sulfate which is blue. The Benedict solution is used to test mono- and disaccharides.
An unknown substance in a solution is slippery to the touch dissolves easily in water and makes litmus paper turns blue
Blue is the solution's color When blue CuSO4.5H2O (copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate) is dissolved, the solution turns blue. When white CuSO4 (anhydrous copper(II) sulfate) is dissolved, the solution turns also blue.
The sbustance is sugar ;D
It fizzes then it dissolves!;D
penises with blue tears
classic recipes say 0.25% bromphenol blue (0.25g/100ml) in a solution containing a viscous substance like: 40%sucrose, or 15%Ficoll, or 30%glycerol all in water. Personally, I use glycerol.
you can get methylene blue powder from a scientific store, it comes in powdered form. its pretty soluble in water and alcohol etc. the stain is made by dissolving an appropriate amount on methylene blue in a solvent, e.g for 0.1 dissolve 0.1% gram of methylene blue in 100 gram water, for 9% dissolve 9 grams
A solution is a mixture of any two substances, usually a liquid. Copper sulphate and water is a solution. There are many other solutions as well. Water and milk is a solution, mixing chemicals. Any mix of materials is technically a solution.
Not completely sure what you're asking, but copper sulfate (CuSO4) will dissolve easily in water to form a cool-looking blue colored solution.(The term is dissolve).
Starch
Starch.
Starch
You place Benedict's solution (blue solution) and the unknown substance (possibly containing monosaccarides) into a beaker and then heat it for approximately 5 minutes. If the substance contains monosaccarides, the solution will turn from blue to orange.
Dissolve a small sample in nitric acid; the color of the solution become blue.