Copper sulfate would crystalize as blue crystals, water would evaporate.
To get the copper sulfate itself to evaporate you would need to heat it, melting the dry crystals then vaporizing them.
Copper Sulfate is CuSO4. Therefore, it has 1 atom of Copper, 1 atom of Sulfur, and 4 atoms of Oxygen.
Copper sulfate doesn't have a compound with the formula Cu2SO6. If it were Cu(SO4)2, it would be copper(II) sulfate.
Copper sulfate will dissolve in water
Yes, copper sulfate is an electrolyte.
No, copper is a metallic element. A substance must be a compound that contains carbon and hydrogen to be considered organic.
Calcium + Copper sulfate ----> Calcium sulfate + Copper It is a single displacement reactions. The products are Calcium Sulfate (white, insoluble) and fillings of copper(reddish-brown).
Since iron is a more active metal than copper, the iron would replace the copper in the copper sulfate, forming iron sulfate, and releasing elemental copper. The copper will not shape itself into a copper vessel, so eventually, the iron sulfate would leak out of the iron vessel, and eventually, if there is enough copper sulfate, the iron vessel will cease to exist.
Anhydrous cupric sulfate would form hydrated copper(II) sulfate when water is added to it. This process is exothermic and the anhydrous crystals would dissolve as the water molecules bond with the copper sulfate molecules to form a hydrated crystal structure.
If you needed to use powered copper 2 sulfate in an experiment and were only supplied with clumps of copper 2 sulfate which tool would you need to convert the copper sulfate to usable form?
Copper sulfate is soluble in water and dissociated in ions (Cu2)+ and (SO4)2-.
there would be a single replacement reaction where the copper forms on the top of the zinc and the blue color of the copper sulfate would get lighter and eventually you would end up with zinc sulfate and copper
You would need a mortar and pestle to crush and grind the clumps of copper sulfate into a powdered form.
To prepare a saturated solution of copper sulfate at 20 degrees Celsius, you would need to dissolve approximately 203 grams of copper sulfate in 400 grams of water. This is based on the solubility of copper sulfate in water at that temperature.
To convert clumps of copper sulfate into a usable form, you would need a mortar and pestle. Grind the clumps of copper sulfate in the mortar with the pestle to break them down into a fine powder that can be easily used in your experiment.
Mixing these two reagents would make a dilute solution of copper sulfate.
It would form a white substance called anhydrous copper(II) Sulfate. *Anhydrous - Salts that do not contain water. Copper (II) sulfate pentahydrate is also called "blue vitriol," because it's, well, blue (vitriol is an old term for sulfuric acid). However, anhydrous copper (II) sulfate is white.
You will have to assume that the 2 % is a volume fraction, then the volume of copper sulfate in the solution would be 11.5 milliliter(575 ml*(0.02). If it were a weight fraction, then you would have to have more information on the solution density.