Things You'll Need
Instructions
Put on appropriate personal protective equipment; acid-resistant gloves, lab coat and goggles. Put all your glassware, chemicals and apparatus in a chemical fume hood.
Cut off a portion of copper from a spool of wire or some other source of this metal. Weigh the portion you have taken.
Pour some concentrated nitric acid (HNO3) from its bulk container into a labeled beaker. Use about 5 mL of acid for every 0.5 g of copper metal you have in your sample.Perform this step, and all others in the fume hood.
Place your portion of copper metal in the beaker with the acid. Lower the metal slowly and carefully so it does not splash the acid. You can use tweezers or tongs to make this safer.
Allow the metal to sit in the acid. It will react with the nitric acid to produce copper ions with a double positive charge, known as Cu(II). The reaction will also make nitrogen dioxide, which will escape from the beaker as a brownish gas. The equation for this reaction is Cu(s) + 4H+(aq) + 2NO3-(aq ) --> Cu2+(aq ) + 2NO2(g ) + 2H2O(l).