i am not entirely sure what this process is called, but i do know how you do it! you put in two electrodes with a solution of it into a beaker, make sure the electrodes are not touching, then send a current through them and the chlorine will bubble around one of the electrodes and the copper will be wrapped around the other, this is because of the charges in the copper and the chlorine, i can't remember which one is negatively charged and which is postively charged.
Wash the mixture with water and separate the solid from the liquid, for example, by filtration. The sodium chloride will dissolve in the wash water, while the copper is left behind.
it condenses as the black papers lighten up like a dynamite
Emphatically no! Iron or steel will rapidly dissolve in hydrochloric acid generating hydrogen gas. Even stainless steel is not very good for containing hydrochloric acid. Chloride ions are highly corrosive and cause normal grades of stainless to pit and crack. The best bet (besides avoiding it altogether) is glass (as it is stored in a laboratory) or plastic - PVC, polyethylene, or polypropylene.
Carbon Steel is much stronger metal.
Potassium chloride is a ionic lattice which is made out of potassium ions and chloride ions. Therefore, separate 'molecules of this compound do not exist. The empirical formula itself is KCl which is used also as the chemical formula for the compound.
Copper chloride being a salt is not ductile.
A solution of copper chloride should be electrolyzed.
Wash the mixture with water and separate the solid from the liquid, for example, by filtration. The sodium chloride will dissolve in the wash water, while the copper is left behind.
Is dilution an acceptable way to dispose of the used copper chloride solution
Is dilution an acceptable way to dispose of the used copper chloride solution
ALUMINUUMM
which method will be used to separate sodium chloride and aluminium particals
A refinery separates copper from its ore.
You would need 999,999L of water to dilute used copper chloride solution
none
Crystallization/recrystallization process can be used.
TRUE!