RogueRose - 31-3-2017 at 00:12
I was reading about copper nitrate and under the bottom section it described uses in organic synthesis and it mentioned that hydrated copper nitrate
could be absorbed onto clay and used in the nitration of aromatics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper(II)_nitrate
I'm curious if the same could be done with calcium sulfate instead of clay. I have some blue/green precipitate from a CuSO4 + Ca(NO3)2 combination.
The result was a super fluffy CaSO4 and some Cu(N03)2 that carried over some CaSO4 in the liquid used to rinse the precipitate. Upon
recrystalizations the blue/green powder has been collected and it doesn't wash clean so I'm not sure what it is.
It seems to have the same solubility of CaSO4 but as I said, has retained some copper compound, so I'm wondering if it is an excess of copper nitrate
or sulfate (or not excess, just by product). - Possibly a Bordeaux mixture (CuSO4 + Ca(OH)2) - as CaO is supposedly part of the Ca(NO3)2 ingredient
but it was mixed into solution prior to mixing with sulfate solution. The Bordeaux mixture also has the similar blue/green color.
BTW, I would guess 1% of the reaction turned into this mixture which is also the error % of the scale/balance over the 2 compounds - so it may be due
to excess or insufficient quantities.