The chemical reaction is:
CuCl2 + H2SO4 = CuSO4 + 2 HCl(g)
The gas is hydrogen chloride.
Copper (II) sulphate, CuSO4 is prepared by mixing copper (II) oxide, CuO with sulfuric acid, H2SO4. CuO + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + H2O
CuO + H2SO4 ----> CuSO4 + H2O The products are Copper(II) sulphate and water
Molarity = moles of solute/volume of solution ( so, not a great molarity expected ) 4.60 grams H2SO4 (1mol H2SO4/98.086g) = 0.0469 moles/450ml = 1.04 X 10^-4 Molarity.
Copper sulfate (CuSO4) is not a binary compound of copper and sulfur but a compound of copper, sulfur, and oxygen. It can be made by electrolysis of copper with sulfuric acid: Cu + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + H2
No. Copper will not replace hydrogen in sulfuric acid because it is less reactive than hydrogen.
When copper sulfate (CuSO4) reacts with hydrochloric acid (HCl), copper chloride (CuCl2) and sulfuric acid (H2SO4) are formed as products. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is CuSO4 + 2HCl -> CuCl2 + H2SO4.
We'll assume you mean Copper (II) Carbonate - CuCO3CuCO3 + 2 HCl --> CuCl2 + H2O + CO2It forms Copper (II) Chloride, carbon dioxide and water.
Adding H2SO4 to the preparation of CuSO4 solution helps to prevent the formation of insoluble impurities such as hydroxides and carbonates. The sulfuric acid also helps to stabilize the copper ions in solution and prevent precipitation.
the reaction between cupperous oxide and sulphuric acid will give you a product of copper sulphate and water which is CuSO4 and H2o. I think this is correct product obtained as far as I know and this is a important chemical reation which is frequently udes in many industrial productions.
No, HCN and CuSO4 are different chemical compounds. HCN is hydrogen cyanide and CuSO4 is copper(II) sulfate. Likewise, H2SO4 is sulfuric acid and CuCN2 is copper(I) cyanide, which are also distinct compounds.
This reaction is:NaCl + H2SO4 = NaHSO4 + HCl
Sodium chloride is NaCl. Sulfuric acid is H2SO4.
To standardize 1N H2SO4 with KHP, you would first prepare a solution of KHP of known concentration. Then, titrate the KHP solution with the 1N H2SO4 solution until the endpoint is reached. The volume of H2SO4 used in the titration can then be used to calculate the exact concentration of the H2SO4 solution.
The balanced equation for magnesium chloride (MgCl2) plus sulfuric acid (H2SO4) is: MgCl2 + H2SO4 → MgSO4 + 2HCl.
This will depend upon which version of copper oxide you have - copper I oxide or copper II oxide. For copper I oxide: H2SO4 + Cu2O --> Cu2SO4 + H2O For copper II oxide: H2SO4 + CuO --> CuSO4 + H2O
copper oxide- CuO hydrogen sulphate- h2SO4
CuCO3 + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + CO2 + H2O As this reaction shows just add copper carbonate crystals to a solution of sulfuric acid of diluted concentration. Carbon dioxide should efferves from this solution. I can not remember if the copper sulfate precipitates here, or is in ionized form.