My first thought is copper hydroxide forming as a sort of gel with bubbles trapped in it, as some hydroxides tend to do (Magnesium does this in water,
I believe). I did a search for white inorganic copper compounds and only found anhydrous CuSO4, CuI, and Cu5Si to be white. There are probably many
organics that are white and contain copper, but I don't know how carbon would factor in at all. Very strange results indeed.
Have you taken out the white solid and dried it? Is the white mess crystalline, or soft and (Can't tell from the video) gelatinous? Try heating the
white solid over a flame and see if anything happens. |