Chemistry, asked by yoneha17, 6 months ago

the precipitates of copper hydroxide are...​

Answers

Answered by prateek19948
0

Answer:

Hydroxide ion (OH-) binds to the copper (II) ion even more strongly than does water. As a result, hydroxide ion can displace water from the copper (II) ion, yielding copper hydroxide, Cu(OH)2, a blue precipitate. Heating copper hydroxide produces copper oxide, CuO, a black solid.

Answered by HPKrupana
0

Explanation:

Hydroxide ion (OH-) binds to the copper (II) ion even more strongly than does water. As a result, hydroxide ion can displace water from the copper (II) ion, yielding copper hydroxide, Cu(OH)2, a blue precipitate. Heating copper hydroxide produces copper oxide, CuO, a black solid.

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