Filtration can be used to separate copper sulfate from sulfur because copper sulfate is soluble in water, while sulfur is not. By adding water to the mixture and then filtering, the insoluble sulfur will remain on the filter paper, while the soluble copper sulfate will pass through as part of the filtrate.
The compound containing copper and sulfur is called copper(II) sulfide.
You can separate powdered copper sulfate and powdered copper in a solution through filtration. Copper sulfate is water-soluble and will dissolve in water, while copper metal will not dissolve and can be collected by filtering the solution. Copper can also be separated from copper sulfate by electrolysis, where an electric current is passed through the solution.
No. All metal sulphate are soluble in water, except barium sulphate, calcium sulphate and lead sulphate.
Crystallization is commonly used to purify copper sulfate. The solution containing copper sulfate is heated to dissolve the impurities, then cooled slowly to allow copper sulfate crystals to form and separate from the impurities. The pure copper sulfate crystals can then be separated from the solution through filtration.
There is no substance called "copper sulphur". You could have a mixture of copper and sulphur, though. But there are compounds (pure substances) of copper and sulphur as well. They include copper I and copper II sulphide (Cu2S and CuS). Another, very common compound is copper sulphate, CuSO4
copper and sulphur
i think copper oxide + sulphur dioxide
You can separate copper sulfate and sulfur by heating the mixture. Sulfur has a lower melting point than copper sulfate, so it will melt and can be separated by filtering while copper sulfate remains solid.
copper+sulphur+oxygen then theres an arrow, but i don't know how 2 do an arrow copper sulphate
The compound containing copper and sulfur is called copper(II) sulfide.
To separate copper strips from sulfur powder, you can use a process called filtration. Mix the copper strips and sulfur powder with water to form a mixture. Then, pass the mixture through a filter paper to separate the solid copper strips from the sulfur powder, which will remain in the filter paper.
You can separate powdered copper sulfate and powdered copper in a solution through filtration. Copper sulfate is water-soluble and will dissolve in water, while copper metal will not dissolve and can be collected by filtering the solution. Copper can also be separated from copper sulfate by electrolysis, where an electric current is passed through the solution.
Because zinc is more reactive than copper.
Copper rods cannot separate zinc from zinc sulphate because copper is less reactive than zinc, and cannot separate the zinc which is more reactive than copper. If you get copper sulphate and add some zinc to it, you will see solid copper appearing on the bottom of the test tube... The copper cannot push out the zinc from the solution and take its place.
The only similarity the two have is the fact that both compounds contain copper, which is why both have copper in their respective names. Copper oxide is a combination of copper and oxygen, whereas copper sulphate (also copper sulfate) is a combination of copper, sulphur (also sulfur), and oxygen.
if you mean copper sulphate, also written as copper sulfate it is a compound because it consists of different elements being copper, sulphur and oxygen.
No. All metal sulphate are soluble in water, except barium sulphate, calcium sulphate and lead sulphate.