Q10 of 48 Page 2

(a) The blue colo

(a) The substance is Copper sulphate crystals (CuSO4 . 5H2O) which are blue in colour. When copper sulphate crystals are heated strongly, they lose all the water of crystallisation and form anhydrous copper sulphate (which is white):


Thus, on strong heating, blue copper sulphate crystals turn white due to the loss of water of crystallisation.


The dehydration of copper sulphate crystals is a reversible process. So when water is added to anhydrous copper sulphate, it gets hydrated and turns blue due to the formation of hydrated copper sulphate.



(b) Chemical formula of two such compounds whose one formula unit is associated with 10 and 2 water molecules respectively–



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