As it forms when an acid reacts with a base.
Copper Sulphate CuSO4Since the question did not include Oxygen, the answer is Copper Sulphide (CuxSx)If you have only Copper and Sulphur reacting the product is Copper Sulphide (CuS), not Copper Sulphate (CuSO4).Copper Sulphide is made when Copper and Sulphur are heated together - the product is a black solid.Copper Sulphate is produced when Copper is reacted either with sulphuric acid, or with a less reactive metal sulphate. Copper Sulphate is usually in the form of a blue solution but can be evaporated to produce a blue crystalline structure.
Copper (II) sulphate is a salt that is blue.
Yes, tetraamine copper sulfate is a complex salt. It is a coordination complex formed by the interaction of copper sulfate with four ammonia molecules to form a stable complex ion.
actually blue salt of copper sulphate is chemically copper sulphate penta hydrate( CuSO4.5H2O ). blue coloure is due to thiese 5 moles of water . by heating this water evaporates and leaving CuSO4 which is colourless
Copper Sulphate usually is found in a hydrated form (i.e., water molecules are incorporated into the crystals.) Pure copper sulphate is a pale, greenish gray color. The familiar blue color only occurs in hydrates of copper sulphate (i.e., in crystals that incorporate H20 molecules). Heating the blue crystals can drive off the water. It's still called copper sulphate after you do that. For substances like copper sulphate that naturally attract water, the adjective, anhydrous often is used to describe the pure (water free) state. If you heat copper sulphate to a temperature of 650C, it will decompose into something else. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_sulphate
No, its a salt.
Copper Sulphate is a chemical compound w/ a chemical formula CuSO4 .
This is a simple displacement reaction - the more reactive magnesium displaces the less reactive copper from a solution of its salt. .... magnesium + copper sulphate ---> copper + magnesium sulphate Mg + CuSO4 ----> MgSO4 + Cu the blue colour of the copper sulphate will disappear and the silver coloured magnesium will be replaced by brown-red copper metal. Hope this helps. :)
NO, because copper sulphate doesn't contain hydroxide ions, which is responsible for basic nature.
Copper sulphate found naturally in the Earth's crust is typically in the form of chalcanthite.
When iron nails are placed in copper sulphate solution, a displacement reaction occurs where iron replaces copper in the solution to form iron sulphate and copper metal. The word equations for the reactions involved are: Iron (s) + Copper sulphate (aq) -> Iron sulphate (aq) + Copper (s)
No, copper sulfate is not a base. It is a salt composed of copper ions and sulfate ions. It is typically classified as an inorganic compound.
powdered milk, alum, salt, sugar, copper sulphate
Copper sulphate crystals form when a hot saturated solution of copper sulphate is cooled down. As the solution cools, the solubility of copper sulphate decreases, causing the excess copper sulphate to come out of the solution and form crystals.
Copper sulphate.
Copper Sulphate CuSO4Since the question did not include Oxygen, the answer is Copper Sulphide (CuxSx)If you have only Copper and Sulphur reacting the product is Copper Sulphide (CuS), not Copper Sulphate (CuSO4).Copper Sulphide is made when Copper and Sulphur are heated together - the product is a black solid.Copper Sulphate is produced when Copper is reacted either with sulphuric acid, or with a less reactive metal sulphate. Copper Sulphate is usually in the form of a blue solution but can be evaporated to produce a blue crystalline structure.
Copper (II) sulphate is a salt that is blue.