Emmasham Posted April 1, 2010 Posted April 1, 2010 Is there any chance that we get Cu2O directly from CuCl?
Physicsfan Posted May 30, 2010 Posted May 30, 2010 react a solution of CuCl with an aqueous solution of a soluble oxide
hermanntrude Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 Cu+ has an annoying tendency to oxidize to Cu2+. i don't know if that might be trouble in the suggested reaction...
Bobba fett Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 (edited) Hey would this work? [ce]2CuCl -> 2Cu+ + 2Cl-[/ce] [ce]Na2O -> 2Na+ + O--[/ce] [ce]2Cu+ + O-- -> Cu2O[/ce] Edited June 7, 2010 by Bobba fett
John Cuthber Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 But it still works. CuCl + NaOH --> NaCl + CuOH 2 CuOH --> Cu2O + H2O
ercdndrs Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 I don't think copper (I) hydroxide is a valid compound : / "Additives such as water and acids... oxid[ize CuO] to copper(II) oxides." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper(I)_oxide Thus, you'd end up with CuO from Cu(OH)2 Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedEdit: nevermind, the same page says "Aqueous cuprous chloride solutions react with base to give [Cu2O]"
Bobba fett Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 How about this reaction [ce]2CuCl -> 2Cu+ + 2Cl-[/ce] [ce]Na2CO3 ->2Na+ +CO3--[/ce] [ce]2Cu+ + CO3-- -> Cu2CO3[/ce] Now by thermal decomposition, [ce]Cu2CO3 -> Cu2O + CO2[/ce]
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