now how can I best describe the action of the HCl ? What would you say I anyone asked you what happens when adding the HCl ?
to form CuCl
2(green) then the complex [CuCl
4]
2- which is a brown solution
Why does this happend and why do I need to boil it?
because you need to drive the equilibrium towards the formation of CuCl
3-[/quote]
Ok, the following thing is a bit confusing:
to form CuCl
2(green) then the complex [CuCl
4]
2- which is a brown solution
you state that there will be CuCl
2(green) and then [CuCl
4]
2- which is a brown solution
but then you write:
Why does this happend and why do I need to boil it?[/quote]
because you need to drive the equilibrium towards the formation of CuCl
3-you ment CuCl
4-2 ? in stead of CuCl
3-Or did you mean CuCl
2 wich would be even more confusing because then you would try to go back from the brown solution towards the green one.
@Borek
Copper doesn't dissolve in acids.
==> so I will still see the copper in his original form?
Is it all the time the same solution, or have you in the meantime filtered out the precipitate? Because if you are doing it in the same solution, carbonate step seems superficial to me.
==> ah yes, you are right!
I forget an important step:
After adding the Na2CO3 I have to filter the precipate (=the CuCO3)