Well, friend, to dilute 1 liter of a copper chloride solution from 100,000 ppm to 1 ppm, you'll need to add quite a bit of water. You see, for every liter of the original solution, you'll need to add 99 liters of water. This will help bring the concentration down to that lovely 1 ppm you're aiming for. Just remember to mix it all up gently, like you're painting a beautiful sky.
When chlorine gas reacts with a cold dilute solution of sodium hydroxide, it forms a mixture of sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and sodium chloride (NaCl). This reaction is used in the production of household bleach.
No, a solution cannot be both saturated and dilute at the same time. A saturated solution contains the maximum amount of solute that can be dissolved in a solvent at a given temperature, while a dilute solution has a relatively small amount of solute dissolved in the solvent.
Adding solvent will make a solution more diluted. Think of it this way. Take water (solvent) and dissolve salt into it (solute). In order to dilute or increase the ratio of solvent to solute, you would add more water.
Take some copper sulfate solid and add it to a beaker of water. Stir and you will see that the solid slowly disappears to form a blue solution. Copper sulfate has dissolved and is therefore soluble in water. Anhydrous copper sulfate is a white solid while hydrated copper sultate (CuSO4.5H2O) is blue.
A dilute aqueous solution of potassium nitrate would be classified as an electrolyte due to the presence of potassium ions (K+) and nitrate ions (NO3-) that can conduct electricity when dissolved in water.
Oh, dude, you'd need a lot of water for that. Like, a crazy amount. To dilute copper chloride solution from 100000 ppm to less than 1 ppm, you'd need to dilute it by a factor of 100000. So, you'd need to add 99999 parts water for every part of the original solution. Good luck with that math!
You would add powdered copper carbonate to dilute hydrochloric acid to produce copper chloride solution and carbon dioxide gas.
If you want to extract copper using dilute acid you must use sulphuric dilute acid. Pour it into a container and add some copper oxide (it's powder, I'm not sure if that's it's name) then take another container and put some filter paper on it and pour the mixture into that. It should look blue. Then add some filings into it and they should turn pink.
Blue
Mixing these two reagents would make a dilute solution of copper sulfate.
An electrolysis process is based upon movement and flow of ions. More is the solution dilute, more is the movement of ions and more is the conductance of solution. Thus, when the solution is dilute more copper ions flow to the electrode and get deposited there
A very dilute solution of copper sulfate is used in the biuret test because it allows for the detection of proteins through the formation of a complex with peptide bonds. When proteins are present, the copper ions in the dilute solution react with the peptide bonds, resulting in a color change to violet. The dilution ensures that the solution is not too concentrated, which could lead to interference in color interpretation and false positives. This sensitivity is crucial for accurately determining protein presence in a sample.
They cannot survive in a 100% pure chlorine solution. However, for a very brief period they may survive in an extremely dilute chlorine solution.
The acid that reacts with copper(II) carbonate to give a blue solution is hydrochloric acid (HCl). This reaction forms a solution of copper(II) chloride, which appears blue due to the presence of copper ions.
Probably a very dilute solution of copper sulphate act as a desinfecting agent; but the copper sulphate is toxic. It is more sure to avoid this experiment.
Usually hydrogen will evolve from the cathode and oxygen from the anode, but if zinc is the anode, it may dissolve to produce zinc ions in the solution either instead of or along with oxygen evolving.
Copper does not react with dilute Sulphuric acid.