QUESTION IMAGE
Question
practice questions-physical and chemical properties
- identify each of the following properties as either chemical(c) or physical (p)
| burning wood | chemical change |
| melting point of water is 0° | physical change |
| the color of the book is red | physical change |
| rusting of a nail | chemical change |
| forcing a piece of metal into a sheet | physical change |
| stretching of a metal into a wire | |
| density of water is 1 g/cm³ | physical change |
| rising of dough when placed in an oven | chemical change |
| dissolving of sugar in water | physical change |
To determine if the given answers are correct, we analyze each property:
1. Burning wood
- Explanation: Burning wood involves a chemical reaction (combustion) producing new substances (ash, CO₂, etc.).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Chemical Change" – Correct (should be "Chemical (C)" for property, but the concept of chemical change here aligns; the term "change" vs "property" is a minor wording issue, but the classification is right).
2. Melting point of water is \( 0^\circ \)
- Explanation: Melting point is a physical property (describes state change without new substances).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Incorrect (melting point is a physical property, not a change. The answer confuses "property" with "change," but the classification as "physical" (vs chemical) is conceptually right, though the term "change" is inaccurate).
3. The color of the book is red
- Explanation: Color is a physical property (no chemical reaction, describes appearance).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Incorrect (color is a physical property, not a change. Again, wording issue, but classification as "physical" is conceptually right).
4. Rusting of a nail
- Explanation: Rusting is a chemical reaction (iron + oxygen + water → rust, new substance).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Chemical change" – Correct (rusting is a chemical change, so the classification is right, even with "change" vs "property" wording).
5. Forcing a piece of metal into a sheet
- Explanation: This is shaping (malleability), a physical change (no new substance, just form).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical change" – Correct (malleability is a physical property, and shaping is a physical change; classification is right).
6. Stretching of a metal into a wire
- Explanation: This is ductility (physical property), a physical change (no new substance, just form).
- Correctness: No label (blank) – Incorrect (should be "Physical (P)" or "Physical Change").
7. Density of water is \( 1 \, \text{g/cm}^3 \)
- Explanation: Density is a physical property (describes mass/volume, no chemical reaction).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Incorrect (density is a physical property, not a change. Wording issue, but classification as "physical" is conceptually right).
8. Rising of dough when placed in an oven
- Explanation: Dough rising involves yeast fermentation (chemical reaction, new gases/substances).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Chemical Change" – Correct (fermentation is a chemical change, classification is right).
9. Dissolving of sugar in water
- Explanation: Dissolving sugar is a physical change (sugar disperses, no new substance; can be reversed).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Correct (dissolving is a physical change, classification is right).
Summary of Corrections:
- For properties 2, 3, 7: The term "change" is incorrect (they are properties, not changes), but the "physical" classification is conceptually right.
- Property 6: Missing label (should be "Physical Change" or "Physical (P)").
If we strictly distinguish "property" (describes a substance) from "change" (process), the answers have wording errors but mostly correct classifications. For example:
- "Melting point of water is \( 0^\circ \)" is a physical property (P), not a "change."
- "The color of the book is red" is a physical property (P), not a "change."
- "Density of water is \( 1 \, \text{g/cm}^3 \)" is a **physical p…
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To determine if the given answers are correct, we analyze each property:
1. Burning wood
- Explanation: Burning wood involves a chemical reaction (combustion) producing new substances (ash, CO₂, etc.).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Chemical Change" – Correct (should be "Chemical (C)" for property, but the concept of chemical change here aligns; the term "change" vs "property" is a minor wording issue, but the classification is right).
2. Melting point of water is \( 0^\circ \)
- Explanation: Melting point is a physical property (describes state change without new substances).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Incorrect (melting point is a physical property, not a change. The answer confuses "property" with "change," but the classification as "physical" (vs chemical) is conceptually right, though the term "change" is inaccurate).
3. The color of the book is red
- Explanation: Color is a physical property (no chemical reaction, describes appearance).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Incorrect (color is a physical property, not a change. Again, wording issue, but classification as "physical" is conceptually right).
4. Rusting of a nail
- Explanation: Rusting is a chemical reaction (iron + oxygen + water → rust, new substance).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Chemical change" – Correct (rusting is a chemical change, so the classification is right, even with "change" vs "property" wording).
5. Forcing a piece of metal into a sheet
- Explanation: This is shaping (malleability), a physical change (no new substance, just form).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical change" – Correct (malleability is a physical property, and shaping is a physical change; classification is right).
6. Stretching of a metal into a wire
- Explanation: This is ductility (physical property), a physical change (no new substance, just form).
- Correctness: No label (blank) – Incorrect (should be "Physical (P)" or "Physical Change").
7. Density of water is \( 1 \, \text{g/cm}^3 \)
- Explanation: Density is a physical property (describes mass/volume, no chemical reaction).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Incorrect (density is a physical property, not a change. Wording issue, but classification as "physical" is conceptually right).
8. Rising of dough when placed in an oven
- Explanation: Dough rising involves yeast fermentation (chemical reaction, new gases/substances).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Chemical Change" – Correct (fermentation is a chemical change, classification is right).
9. Dissolving of sugar in water
- Explanation: Dissolving sugar is a physical change (sugar disperses, no new substance; can be reversed).
- Correctness: Labeled as "Physical Change" – Correct (dissolving is a physical change, classification is right).
Summary of Corrections:
- For properties 2, 3, 7: The term "change" is incorrect (they are properties, not changes), but the "physical" classification is conceptually right.
- Property 6: Missing label (should be "Physical Change" or "Physical (P)").
If we strictly distinguish "property" (describes a substance) from "change" (process), the answers have wording errors but mostly correct classifications. For example:
- "Melting point of water is \( 0^\circ \)" is a physical property (P), not a "change."
- "The color of the book is red" is a physical property (P), not a "change."
- "Density of water is \( 1 \, \text{g/cm}^3 \)" is a physical property (P), not a "change."
- "Stretching of a metal into a wire" is a physical change (P) (or property: ductility).
To reclassify correctly (using "C" for chemical property/change, "P" for physical):
| Property/Process | Correct Classification (C/P) | Given Label (Correct? Y/N) |
|---|---|---|
| Melting point of water is \( 0^\circ \) | P (property) | N (labeled as "Change") |
| The color of the book is red | P (property) | N (labeled as "Change") |
| Rusting of a nail | C | Y (Chemical Change) |
| Forcing a metal into a sheet | P (change/property) | Y (Physical Change) |
| Stretching metal into a wire | P (change/property) | N (blank) |
| Density of water is \( 1 \, \text{g/cm}^3 \) | P (property) | N (labeled as "Change") |
| Rising of dough in oven | C | Y (Chemical Change) |
| Dissolving sugar in water | P (change) | Y (Physical Change) |
The core classifications (physical vs chemical) are mostly correct, but the term "change" is misused for "properties" (melting point, color, density are properties, not changes).