Adding an excess of copper carbonate ensures that all the sulfuric acid is fully neutralized and reacts with the copper carbonate to form copper sulfate. This guarantees that the maximum amount of copper sulfate is produced during the reaction.
Excess copper carbonate is added to ensure that all the copper sulphate is fully converted. This helps to make sure that all the starting material is used up and that the reaction goes to completion, resulting in a higher yield of pure copper sulphate crystals.
There are many salts made from sulphuric acid. A chemical salt consists of any given metal, and the acid anion. In the case of Sulphuric Acid, the acid anion is the sulphate anion ' SO4^(2-) ' This can combine with many different metals, e.g. sodium, calcium , copper, to form the salts, respectively, sodium sulphate (Na2SO4), calcium sulphate(CaSO4), copper sulphate(CuSO4). There are many other combinations.
Copper carbonate or copper hydroxide can be used as alternatives to copper oxide in preparing copper sulfate. These compounds can react with sulfuric acid to produce copper sulfate in a similar manner to copper oxide.
When copper reacts with sulphuric acid, copper sulfate is formed. This reaction involves the displacement of hydrogen in sulphuric acid by copper, resulting in the formation of copper sulfate and hydrogen gas.
The precipitate formed when copper sulfate and sodium carbonate are mixed is copper carbonate. This reaction occurs because copper carbonate is insoluble in water and therefore forms a solid precipitate.
Sulphuric acid, because "sulphuric" is what gives copper sulphate it's name
copper sulphate and carbon dioxide
Sulphuric acid is mixed with copper oxide to make copper sulphate through a chemical reaction.
Excess copper carbonate is added to ensure that all the copper sulphate is fully converted. This helps to make sure that all the starting material is used up and that the reaction goes to completion, resulting in a higher yield of pure copper sulphate crystals.
Copper carbonate + sulphuric acid = copper sulphate + water + carbon dioxide
There are many salts made from sulphuric acid. A chemical salt consists of any given metal, and the acid anion. In the case of Sulphuric Acid, the acid anion is the sulphate anion ' SO4^(2-) ' This can combine with many different metals, e.g. sodium, calcium , copper, to form the salts, respectively, sodium sulphate (Na2SO4), calcium sulphate(CaSO4), copper sulphate(CuSO4). There are many other combinations.
Copper carbonate or copper hydroxide can be used as alternatives to copper oxide in preparing copper sulfate. These compounds can react with sulfuric acid to produce copper sulfate in a similar manner to copper oxide.
Copper Oxide reacts with Sulphuric acid to form Copper Sulphate and Water.
Sulphuric acid
the answer is..... 2
When copper reacts with sulphuric acid, copper sulfate is formed. This reaction involves the displacement of hydrogen in sulphuric acid by copper, resulting in the formation of copper sulfate and hydrogen gas.
CuCO3 + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + CO2 + H2O As this reaction shows just add copper carbonate crystals to a solution of sulfuric acid of diluted concentration. Carbon dioxide should efferves from this solution. I can not remember if the copper sulfate precipitates here, or is in ionized form.