i am still hoping to see how much gold is in the stream that you wanted to try out, but the hunters were there. as you mentioned that you had tested it and found alot of microscopic gold.
I plan to go there again. Last time it was summer, and I was worried that someone might be watching me. The visibility was poor because of the leaves on the trees. Now the leaves have almost all fallen, and it is possible to go there again. When someone walks on dry leaves, you can hear them from far away 🙂
I think there was sulfuric acid in there. I drain copper nitrite after dissolving the base metals into one bucket. Sometimes I dissolved something just in nitric acid, and sometimes if the material was magnetic I used electrolyte plus nitric acid. I don't remember exactly, but I think yes. The bucket was in my storage for about 6 months.
I think what Hill13 is asking is and is what I was wondering how did you convert Copper Nitrate to Copper Sulfate crystals just by dropping out crystals wouldn’t the end product be Copper Nitrite crystals I’m a bit confused to. Love your channel by the way
@@markgellie7032 Copper sulfate and copper nitrate are both chemical compounds containing copper, but they differ in terms of their chemical formulas, compositions, and properties. Copper sulfate, with the chemical formula CuSO4, is a blue crystalline compound that contains copper, sulfur, and oxygen. It is commonly used as a fungicide, herbicide, and in various industrial processes. Copper sulfate is often used to test for the presence of water in a substance, as it changes color when it reacts with water. Copper nitrate, on the other hand, has the chemical formula Cu(NO3)2 and is a blue-green crystalline compound. It contains copper, nitrogen, and oxygen. Copper nitrate is used in various applications such as dyeing, printing, and electroplating. It can also be used to prepare other copper compounds. In summary, the main difference between copper sulfate and copper nitrate lies in their chemical compositions and applications, despite both being sources of copper ions and sharing some similarities in their blue coloration.
@@Hill-13 Ok so if I put iron in there to drop the copper out. Then half the solution I will end up with Ferrous Sulphate. Cool I’m going to have a go at that with my waste solutions
Personally, I do nothing with it in the garden. One farmer I know asked me to make pure copper sulfate for him. He has large fields and grows corn. He says that when corn grows, the plants take all the minerals from the soil, and after a few years the soil becomes empty. Plants do not grow well, and for this you need to saturate the soil with metals and minerals. Just as our body needs iron, so all plants need iron.
How is it copper sulphate if you just boiled down the copper nitrate? Wouldn't the crystals be copper nitrate crystals? I have been making copper sulphate by letting my cemented copper oxidize then washing it in dilute sulphuric acid , then boiling that down and letting it crystalize.
When metallic copper is dissolved in acid, we get a blue solution, this is copper nitrate. And if you want to get copper sulfate from copper nitrate, you just need to evaporate the solution by half. When we evaporate a solution, water evaporates, water, not copper nitrate. And when the copper nitrate solution cools down, it will crystallize due to its high density. This is how copper sulfate is made. The process is the same as with iron sulfate. If you don't understand something, Wikipedia will help you. But there is one thing: you cannot dislike on Wikipedia 🤣 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper(II)_sulfate
@@akgoldbear7669 Yes, I understand about concentrating solutions by boiling off the water. But if you just boil don your nitric solution it doesnt just magically make copper sulphate, you didnt mention adding any sulphuric acid so I just assumed you would have ended up with copper nitrate, also blue crystals en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper(II)_nitrate#:~:text=Copper(II)%20nitrate%20describes%20any,are%20the%20hemipentahydrate%20and%20trihydrate. Anyway, thanks for the video, I do enjoy your videos. I look forward to the next one😊
@@adambrewer9182 My copper nitrate solution contained copper, which was dissolved in an electrolyte with nitric acid. Why should I talk about the acid content of my solution?! I just showed how I extracted copper sulfate from a copper nitrate solution. It's a completely different story how copper nitride, copper acetate or copper sulfate are made from a copper nitrate solution 😉
@@akgoldbear7669 Because you say the initial solution is "copper nitrate" and the title of your video has the word "converting" so we assume you are going to add some form of the element "sulphur" at some point, but you never do. You just "magically" go from "nitrate" to "sulphur" by boiling it down!!!! You never tell the viewer that your copper nitrate also contains copper sulphate. So we just assume its pure copper nitrate. As you say, the video shows you "extracting" the copper sulphate from solution. This is different to "conversion" as the title calls it. Extraction is different to conversion. Conversion implies that you are going to "convert" from nitrate to sulphate, (there will be a change in the chemistry, a reaction) extraction means you are going to remove something that is already there.
Тоже будь здоров и береги себя ❤ !
Привет 🙂
Лайк и комментарий в поддержку канала. Успеха
Огромное спасибо за поддержку 🙂
i am still hoping to see how much gold is in the stream that you wanted to try out, but the hunters were there. as you mentioned that you had tested it and found alot of microscopic gold.
I plan to go there again. Last time it was summer, and I was worried that someone might be watching me. The visibility was poor because of the leaves on the trees. Now the leaves have almost all fallen, and it is possible to go there again. When someone walks on dry leaves, you can hear them from far away 🙂
May I ask did you add sulfuric acid to the copper nitrate . Then collected the copper sulphate as it dropped out ?
I think there was sulfuric acid in there. I drain copper nitrite after dissolving the base metals into one bucket. Sometimes I dissolved something just in nitric acid, and sometimes if the material was magnetic I used electrolyte plus nitric acid. I don't remember exactly, but I think yes. The bucket was in my storage for about 6 months.
I think what Hill13 is asking is and is what I was wondering how did you convert Copper Nitrate to Copper Sulfate crystals just by dropping out crystals wouldn’t the end product be Copper Nitrite crystals I’m a bit confused to. Love your channel by the way
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper(II)_sulfate
🙂
@@markgellie7032 Copper sulfate and copper nitrate are both chemical compounds containing copper, but they differ in terms of their chemical formulas, compositions, and properties.
Copper sulfate, with the chemical formula CuSO4, is a blue crystalline compound that contains copper, sulfur, and oxygen. It is commonly used as a fungicide, herbicide, and in various industrial processes. Copper sulfate is often used to test for the presence of water in a substance, as it changes color when it reacts with water.
Copper nitrate, on the other hand, has the chemical formula Cu(NO3)2 and is a blue-green crystalline compound. It contains copper, nitrogen, and oxygen. Copper nitrate is used in various applications such as dyeing, printing, and electroplating. It can also be used to prepare other copper compounds.
In summary, the main difference between copper sulfate and copper nitrate lies in their chemical compositions and applications, despite both being sources of copper ions and sharing some similarities in their blue coloration.
@@Hill-13 Ok so if I put iron in there to drop the copper out. Then half the solution I will end up with Ferrous Sulphate. Cool I’m going to have a go at that with my waste solutions
Was machst Du im Garten damit?
Personally, I do nothing with it in the garden. One farmer I know asked me to make pure copper sulfate for him. He has large fields and grows corn. He says that when corn grows, the plants take all the minerals from the soil, and after a few years the soil becomes empty. Plants do not grow well, and for this you need to saturate the soil with metals and minerals. Just as our body needs iron, so all plants need iron.
How is it copper sulphate if you just boiled down the copper nitrate? Wouldn't the crystals be copper nitrate crystals? I have been making copper sulphate by letting my cemented copper oxidize then washing it in dilute sulphuric acid , then boiling that down and letting it crystalize.
When metallic copper is dissolved in acid, we get a blue solution, this is copper nitrate. And if you want to get copper sulfate from copper nitrate, you just need to evaporate the solution by half. When we evaporate a solution, water evaporates, water, not copper nitrate. And when the copper nitrate solution cools down, it will crystallize due to its high density. This is how copper sulfate is made. The process is the same as with iron sulfate.
If you don't understand something, Wikipedia will help you. But there is one thing: you cannot dislike on Wikipedia 🤣
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper(II)_sulfate
@@akgoldbear7669 Yes, I understand about concentrating solutions by boiling off the water. But if you just boil don your nitric solution it doesnt just magically make copper sulphate, you didnt mention adding any sulphuric acid so I just assumed you would have ended up with copper nitrate, also blue crystals
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper(II)_nitrate#:~:text=Copper(II)%20nitrate%20describes%20any,are%20the%20hemipentahydrate%20and%20trihydrate.
Anyway, thanks for the video, I do enjoy your videos. I look forward to the next one😊
@@adambrewer9182 My copper nitrate solution contained copper, which was dissolved in an electrolyte with nitric acid. Why should I talk about the acid content of my solution?! I just showed how I extracted copper sulfate from a copper nitrate solution. It's a completely different story how copper nitride, copper acetate or copper sulfate are made from a copper nitrate solution 😉
@@akgoldbear7669 Because you say the initial solution is "copper nitrate" and the title of your video has the word "converting" so we assume you are going to add some form of the element "sulphur" at some point, but you never do. You just "magically" go from "nitrate" to "sulphur" by boiling it down!!!!
You never tell the viewer that your copper nitrate also contains copper sulphate. So we just assume its pure copper nitrate. As you say, the video shows you "extracting" the copper sulphate from solution. This is different to "conversion" as the title calls it. Extraction is different to conversion. Conversion implies that you are going to "convert" from nitrate to sulphate, (there will be a change in the chemistry, a reaction) extraction means you are going to remove something that is already there.
I realized what the problem was, the problem was in knowledge of english 👌 I changed the title of the video 🙂
Das ist nicht trocken. Sondern:Der Prozentsatz an Kristallwasser in CuSO4. 5H2O = 5 × 18250 × 100 = 36 %
Copper sulfate is not dry. I did not need dry powder 🙂
@@akgoldbear7669 Kann am Übersetzer liegen, dass nicht sinngemäss übersetzt wird. Sorry