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Friday, March 26, 2021

Making salt crystals - Science





 Aim: To produce copper sulfate salt by reacting copper oxide with an acid.

Equipment: 

  • Copper oxide powder
  • Dilute (0.5 mol L-1) sulfuric acid
  • 50ml measuring cylinder
  • two 100ml beakers
  • Bunsen burner
  • Tripod
  • Gauze mat
  • Funnel
  • Filter paper
  • Thermometer
  • Spatula
  • Evaporating basin
  • Stirring rod

Method:

  1. Add 20ml of sulfuric acid to a 100ml beaker. Heat the acid until it reaches 70℃. Turn off your bunsen burner.
  2. Once heated, use a spatula to add pea-sized portions of copper oxide to the beaker. Stir the mixture for 30 seconds
  3. Repeat step 2 until no more will dissolve. Allow the beaker to cool.
  4. Fold the filter paper and place it in the funnel. Place the filter funnel into the second beaker.
  5. Make sure the beaker is cool enough to hold at the top. The contents should still be hot. You may need your teacher to complete this step.
  6. Gently swirl the contents of the beaker to mix, and then pour into the filter paper in the funnel. Allow filtering through.
  7. Rinse the beaker you used to heat the mixture previously, and place it back on top of the tripod filled with 50-60ml of water.
  8. Place the evaporating basin on top of the beaker and carefully pour some of the solutions from the beaker into the evaporating basin.
  9. Gently heat the beaker until the solution in the evaporating basin has reduced by half.
  10. Leave the evaporating basin to cool. Once cool, move the evaporating basin to a warm place where it will not be disturbed (i.e. a window-still) and observe over the next few days. Blue copper sulfate crystals should form.

Results:

The end results turned out great and actually turned into crystals.

Discussion:


A Copper (oxide) + sulfuric (acid) >Water + copper sulfate.

Copper oxide and sulfuric added together makes water then the water turns into copper sulfate (crystal)


Conclusion:

That the acid actually made into crystals, and the chemicals reacted together.

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