You'll get hydrated Cu ions (blue colored): [Cu(H2O)6]2+ (which will partially protolyse with water, being weak acidic) and SO42- ions:
So the solution is blue and slightly acidic (1M sol'n pH= 4)
a slightly more translucent blue liquid is formed there are small gel like lumps the new substance is copper hydroxide and sodium sulphate
When water is added to CuSO4(Copper II Sulfate), it will become CuSO4⋅H2O (Copper II Sulfate Tetra Hydrate), And it will become a blue-ish color.
In this reaction the water insoluble magnesium hydroxide is obtained.
The chemical equation is:
CuSO4 + 2 HCl = CuCl2 + H2SO4
Sodium displaces the sulfate to make sodium sulfate; iron displaces the hydroxide to make ferrous hydroxide which becomes brown.
protiens
it starts changing to white because the colour of the copper sulphate solution becomes whote during the process of evaporation
When heat copper hydroxide and sodium Nitrate the pale blue precipitate change into black solid
Metallic copper does not react with sodium hydroxide. But if sodium hydroxide is added into a solution of copper ions, it would form Copper(II) Hydroxide. It is a precipitate which is insoluble in water.
The products are Sodium Nitrate and Copper Hydroxide.
Copper chloride + Sodium hydroxide --> Copper hydroxide + sodium chloride
Sodium displaces the sulfate to make sodium sulfate; iron displaces the hydroxide to make ferrous hydroxide which becomes brown.
protiens
it starts changing to white because the colour of the copper sulphate solution becomes whote during the process of evaporation
nothing
Biuret reagent is made up of sodium hydroxide and copper sulphate.
No, the mass is conserved.
Sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfate don't actually react.
When heat copper hydroxide and sodium Nitrate the pale blue precipitate change into black solid
CuSOβ+2NaOH=NaβSOβ+Cu(OH)ββ
Copper sulfate is a reactant in the equation as stated, because it is present before the reaction has occurred and no longer present afterward.