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niassu said:how to extract copper from malachite in laboratory
Ivo said:There are a number of different ways. One of them is this:
Crush lumps of malachite (copper carbonate) into fine poweder, put in test-tube then strongly heat. Thermal decomposition occurs: CuCO3 -> CuO + CO2. Then reduce with carbon: CuO + C -> 2Cu + CO2.
M.S.Princess93 said:I hope this answer can help u
first i wrote crush it then adding sodium and water as sodium will displace it forming soduim carbonte which is soluble in water
then fiter and take resdiue ,wash it to remove impurities then dry it using two fiter papers
Ivo said:M.S.Princess93 said:I hope this answer can help u
first i wrote crush it then adding sodium and water as sodium will displace it forming soduim carbonte which is soluble in water
then fiter and take resdiue ,wash it to remove impurities then dry it using two fiter papers
I'm afraid to say your method is possibly wrong. This is because copper carbonate, as you may know, is insoluble in water. Displacement reactions in water can only occur if the metal is added to a solution, and not just a mixture of copper carbonate and water. Therefore, the sodium would not react with the copper carbonate in this way.
LoayTYS said:Ivo said:M.S.Princess93 said:I hope this answer can help u
first i wrote crush it then adding sodium and water as sodium will displace it forming soduim carbonte which is soluble in water
then fiter and take resdiue ,wash it to remove impurities then dry it using two fiter papers
I'm afraid to say your method is possibly wrong. This is because copper carbonate, as you may know, is insoluble in water. Displacement reactions in water can only occur if the metal is added to a solution, and not just a mixture of copper carbonate and water. Therefore, the sodium would not react with the copper carbonate in this way.
That's exactly why I reacyed malachite with HCl first before adding zinc because Copper Chloride is soluble in water
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