Home
Class 12
CHEMISTRY
In metallurgy, the sulphide ore of coppe...

In metallurgy, the sulphide ore of copper is partly roasted. Why?

Promotional Banner

Topper's Solved these Questions

  • GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND PROCESSES OF ISOLATION OF ELEMENTS

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise ADDITIONAL QUESTION (Mention the role of -)|8 Videos
  • GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND PROCESSES OF ISOLATION OF ELEMENTS

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise ADDITIONAL QUESTION (State, with equations, what happens when)|12 Videos
  • GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND PROCESSES OF ISOLATION OF ELEMENTS

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise EXERCISE (Fill in the blanks )|25 Videos
  • EQUILIBRIUM

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise PRACTICE TEST 7|14 Videos
  • HALOAKANES AND HALOARENES

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise Practise set 10 (Answer the following questions)|10 Videos

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

What type of ores are generally roasted ? Why ?

What happens when the sulphide ore of mercury is subjected to roasting?

Assertion (A) : In hydrometallurgy, the ore is first dissolved in a suitable reagent and then it is precipitated by displacing the metal by a more electropositive one. Reason (R) : Copper is extracted by hydrometallurgy.

In metallurgy, which of the following ores are reduced by carbon after calcination -

A mixture containing sulphides of copper and iron is called …………….

A platinum wire can easily be sealed to a glass bulb while a copper wire wire cannot. Why?

Why are sulphide ores concentrated by froth floatation process?

Copper sulphide ore is heated in a furnace with silica-why?

Explain why the concentraction of the sulphide ore is usually carried out by froth-floatation.

In the extraction of copper from its sulphide ore, the metal finally obtained by the reduction of cuprous oxide with -

CHHAYA PUBLICATION-GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND PROCESSES OF ISOLATION OF ELEMENTS-EXERCISE (SHORT ANSWER-TYPE QUESTIONS)
  1. Discuss the thermodynamic principles of metallurgy.

    Text Solution

    |

  2. Explain why the following reaction, although thermodynamically feasibl...

    Text Solution

    |

  3. Discuss the limitations of Ellingham diagram.

    Text Solution

    |

  4. Name the precious metals in anode mud? Unlike copper, these metals do ...

    Text Solution

    |

  5. The (C,CO) line on the Ellingham diagram slopes downwards. Give reason...

    Text Solution

    |

  6. The (Co, CO(2)) line on the Ellingham diagram slopes upwards. Give rea...

    Text Solution

    |

  7. Write the reactions taking place in different zones in the blast furna...

    Text Solution

    |

  8. In metallurgy, the sulphide ore of copper is partly roasted. Why?

    Text Solution

    |

  9. How can ZnS be separated from a mixture of PbS and ZnS?

    Text Solution

    |

  10. Mention an important use of the thermite process.

    Text Solution

    |

  11. What is the difference between carbon reduction and electrolytic reduc...

    Text Solution

    |

  12. Aluminium reduces Cr(2)O(3) to Cr, but chromium cannot reduce Al(2)O(3...

    Text Solution

    |

  13. What is vapour phase refining ? Explain with an example.

    Text Solution

    |

  14. Give an example of extraction of a metal both by oxidation and reducti...

    Text Solution

    |

  15. CO is a more effective reducing agent than C (coke) below 983K, but C ...

    Text Solution

    |

  16. Althrough Cu and Ag are placed below hydrogen in the electrochemical s...

    Text Solution

    |

  17. Name the metals that are usually extracted by electrolytic reduction. ...

    Text Solution

    |

  18. Though H(2) is a good reducing agent, why is it not used as a reductan...

    Text Solution

    |

  19. Why is the temperature during carbon-reduction of ZnO maintained at 14...

    Text Solution

    |

  20. Cinnabar (HgS) and galena (PbS) are converted into their respective me...

    Text Solution

    |