CuSO4 (copper sulphate) 5 H2O is hydrated, containing water. The crystals (blue-coloured) are still present i believe, and so if you grind the crystals down, you are just making them physically smaller, not chemically altering them.
Grinding a substance is a physical change.
Just griding is physical
Physical change
Grinding is a physical process.
CuSO4 * 5H2O ----> CuSO4 + 5H2O. This is true because CuSO4 * 5 H2O is a salt weakly bounded to water, that is why it is hydrous. When it decomposes, the weak bonds are broken making the products above. CuSO4*5H2O formula is [Cu(OH2)4]SO4*H2O CuSO4 + 5H2O --> [Cu(OH2)4]SO4*H2O
The chemical formula is CuSO4 or Cu2SO4.
copper sulfate CuSO4
This is H2S + CuSO4 = CuS (s) + H2SO4.
Copper sulfate has the chemical formula CuSO4.
Yes, this is a chemical reaction.
CuSO4 * 5H2O ----> CuSO4 + 5H2O. This is true because CuSO4 * 5 H2O is a salt weakly bounded to water, that is why it is hydrous. When it decomposes, the weak bonds are broken making the products above. CuSO4*5H2O formula is [Cu(OH2)4]SO4*H2O CuSO4 + 5H2O --> [Cu(OH2)4]SO4*H2O
CuSO4 . 2H2O
In most cases, removing water is a physical change rather than a chemical change. This is often no more than a drying process where water evaporates from a substance. However there are some chemical reactions that remove water from a substance. Of course, the substance itself will also change in this case. An example is copper sulphate. Its normal composition includes water (CuSO4 pentahydrate) but as it is heated, it loses water molecules and becomes CuSO4 trihydrate.
CuSO4 is the chemical formula of copper(II) sulfate.
Copper(II) sulfate has the formula CuSO4.
CuSO4
CuSO4
CuSO4 or Cu2SO4
Formula: CuSO4
Formula: CuSO4
CuSO4