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QUESTION IMAGE

determine which characteristics of a chemical change each example shows…

Question

determine which characteristics of a chemical change each example shows.
complete the chart.
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popping an inflated balloondissolving sugar in watermixing vinegar and baking soda
a new chemical substance is produced.
a chemical change occurs.
a physical change occurs.

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we analyze each example:

1. Popping an Inflated Balloon
  • The chemical makeup of the substance changes? No (just a physical change in shape/volume of the balloon, gas inside remains the same).
  • A new chemical substance is produced? No (no chemical reaction, just physical deformation).
  • A chemical change occurs? No (no new substance, only physical change).
  • A physical change occurs? Yes (balloon pops, gas expands—physical change in state/shape).
2. Dissolving Sugar in Water
  • The chemical makeup of the substance changes? No (sugar dissolves, but sugar and water retain their chemical identities; it’s a physical mixture).
  • A new chemical substance is produced? No (sugar + water → sugar solution, no new compound).
  • A chemical change occurs? No (physical dissolution, reversible).
  • A physical change occurs? Yes (dissolving is a physical change, as sugar can be recovered by evaporation).
3. Mixing Vinegar and Baking Soda
  • The chemical makeup of the substance changes? Yes (vinegar (acetic acid) reacts with baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) to form new substances: CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate).
  • A new chemical substance is produced? Yes (CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate are new).
  • A chemical change occurs? Yes (reaction with new substance formation).
  • A physical change occurs? No (this is a chemical reaction, not a physical change).
Filling the Chart (Checkboxes):
CharacteristicPopping an Inflated BalloonDissolving Sugar in WaterMixing Vinegar and Baking Soda
A new chemical substance is produced.
A chemical change occurs.
A physical change occurs.

(Note: For each row, check the box only if the statement applies to the example.)

Answer:

To solve this, we analyze each example:

1. Popping an Inflated Balloon
  • The chemical makeup of the substance changes? No (just a physical change in shape/volume of the balloon, gas inside remains the same).
  • A new chemical substance is produced? No (no chemical reaction, just physical deformation).
  • A chemical change occurs? No (no new substance, only physical change).
  • A physical change occurs? Yes (balloon pops, gas expands—physical change in state/shape).
2. Dissolving Sugar in Water
  • The chemical makeup of the substance changes? No (sugar dissolves, but sugar and water retain their chemical identities; it’s a physical mixture).
  • A new chemical substance is produced? No (sugar + water → sugar solution, no new compound).
  • A chemical change occurs? No (physical dissolution, reversible).
  • A physical change occurs? Yes (dissolving is a physical change, as sugar can be recovered by evaporation).
3. Mixing Vinegar and Baking Soda
  • The chemical makeup of the substance changes? Yes (vinegar (acetic acid) reacts with baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) to form new substances: CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate).
  • A new chemical substance is produced? Yes (CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate are new).
  • A chemical change occurs? Yes (reaction with new substance formation).
  • A physical change occurs? No (this is a chemical reaction, not a physical change).
Filling the Chart (Checkboxes):
CharacteristicPopping an Inflated BalloonDissolving Sugar in WaterMixing Vinegar and Baking Soda
A new chemical substance is produced.
A chemical change occurs.
A physical change occurs.

(Note: For each row, check the box only if the statement applies to the example.)