When water and white copper sulfate mix together, the copper sulfate will dissolve in the water, resulting in a blue solution. This is because copper sulfate is a water-soluble compound.
After awhile the silver will turn into copper because silver is originated from copper
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Yea
Mixing these two reagents would make a dilute solution of copper sulfate.
Not much. The Copper (II) sulfate will just dissolve in the water (at about 316g/L of water). Copper (II) sulfate is pretty friendly around water and not all that dangerous. It's used commercially.
water and copper(II)sulfate CuO + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + H2O
When copper oxide is mixed with sulfuric acid, a chemical reaction occurs that forms copper sulfate and water. The copper oxide reacts with the sulfuric acid to produce copper sulfate while the water is a byproduct of the reaction. This is a common method for preparing copper sulfate in a laboratory setting.
When you mix copper sulfate with potassium hexacyanoferrate, it forms a complex compound known as copper(II) hexacyanoferrate(II) or Turnbull's blue. This compound is a deep blue precipitate that is insoluble in water.
Copper sulfate dissolves better in warm water because higher temperatures typically increase the solubility of solids. Warm water has more kinetic energy, allowing the copper sulfate particles to break apart more easily and mix with the water molecules.
Iridium can form alloys with copper.
You get copper sulphide, because a metal and a non-metal are reacting.