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Take a cupful of water in a beaker and add few drops of dilute sulphuric acid. Heat water. When it starts boiling add copper sulphate powder slowly while stirring continuously. Continue adding copper sulphate powder till no more powder can be dissolved. Filter the solution. Allow it to cool. Do not disturb the solution after some time. We can see the crystals of copper sulphate. If we do not see any crystals, wait for some more time. Your copper sulphate crystal is ready.

By: darani.a

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11y ago
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15y ago

copper(II) hydroxide and aqueous sodium sulphate. copper(II) hydroxide is a light blue precipitate, which is insoluble in excess sodium hydroxide solution. it may also form a blue gelatinous pricipitent in the test tube.

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16y ago

It would dissolve in the water turning the water blue and you can get it back by evaporating it.

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16y ago

Its easy, here:

Sulphuric Acid + Copper Oxide = Copper Sulphate + Water

Enjoy

;)

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9y ago

Copper sulphate is formed as a reaction of treating copper oxide with sulfuric acid. No further separation is needed in this formation, except for driving off water.

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14y ago

by volcanic activities in the earth's crust

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13y ago

A blue liquid. The copper sulfate itself is also blue. So it dissolves in water, changing the color of the water to blue.

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11y ago

copper and oxygen

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14y ago

copper is reacted with oxygen to form copper oxide, this is then treated with sulphuric acid to form copper sulphate ( and water)/ or CuO + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + H2O

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11y ago

Could be.

Cu + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + H2

===========================idealized reaction that assumes single displacement.

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Q: What is formed when solid copper sulphate is mixed with water?
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Related questions

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aqueous copper sulphate having high conductive hydroxide ions were as no in solid Copper sulphate.


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