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Question
unit 3 matter interactions > lesson 5 physical vs. chemical change mark as complete determine which characteristics of a chemical change each example shows. select the proper buttons to complete the chart. characteristics of a chemical change popping an inflated balloon dissolving sugar in water mixing vinegar and baking soda a physical change occurs. □ □ □ the chemical makeup of the substance changes. □ □ □ a new chemical substance is produced. □ □ □ a chemical change occurs. □ □ □
To solve this, we analyze each example based on physical and chemical change concepts:
1. Popping an Inflated Balloon
- A physical change occurs: ✔️ (Popping a balloon is a physical change—only shape/state of the balloon (or gas inside) changes, no new substance. Chemical makeup of the balloon/gas doesn’t change.)
- The chemical makeup of the substance changes: ❌ (No chemical reaction, so chemical makeup remains same.)
- A new chemical substance is produced: ❌ (No new substance formed.)
- A chemical change occurs: ❌ (Only physical change.)
2. Dissolving Sugar in Water
- A physical change occurs: ✔️ (Dissolving sugar is a physical change—sugar molecules disperse in water, but sugar and water retain their chemical identities. No new substance.)
- The chemical makeup of the substance changes: ❌ (Sugar (sucrose) and water (H₂O) remain chemically unchanged.)
- A new chemical substance is produced: ❌ (No chemical reaction; sugar can be recovered by evaporation.)
- A chemical change occurs: ❌ (Physical change, not chemical.)
3. Mixing Vinegar and Baking Soda
- A physical change occurs: ❌ (A chemical reaction occurs: Vinegar (acetic acid) + Baking Soda (sodium bicarbonate) → Carbon dioxide + Water + Sodium acetate. So it’s a chemical change, not physical.)
- The chemical makeup of the substance changes: ✔️ (Reactants (vinegar, baking soda) are converted into new products (CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate), so chemical makeup changes.)
- A new chemical substance is produced: ✔️ (New substances (CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate) are formed.)
- A chemical change occurs: ✔️ (Chemical reaction with new substances formed.)
Final Chart (Checkboxes):
| Characteristics of a Chemical Change | Popping an Inflated Balloon | Dissolving Sugar in Water | Mixing Vinegar and Baking Soda |
|---|---|---|---|
| The chemical makeup of the substance changes. | ❌ | ❌ | ☑️ |
| A new chemical substance is produced. | ❌ | ❌ | ☑️ |
| A chemical change occurs. | ❌ | ❌ | ☑️ |
(Note: For each row, check the box if the statement applies to the example.)
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To solve this, we analyze each example based on physical and chemical change concepts:
1. Popping an Inflated Balloon
- A physical change occurs: ✔️ (Popping a balloon is a physical change—only shape/state of the balloon (or gas inside) changes, no new substance. Chemical makeup of the balloon/gas doesn’t change.)
- The chemical makeup of the substance changes: ❌ (No chemical reaction, so chemical makeup remains same.)
- A new chemical substance is produced: ❌ (No new substance formed.)
- A chemical change occurs: ❌ (Only physical change.)
2. Dissolving Sugar in Water
- A physical change occurs: ✔️ (Dissolving sugar is a physical change—sugar molecules disperse in water, but sugar and water retain their chemical identities. No new substance.)
- The chemical makeup of the substance changes: ❌ (Sugar (sucrose) and water (H₂O) remain chemically unchanged.)
- A new chemical substance is produced: ❌ (No chemical reaction; sugar can be recovered by evaporation.)
- A chemical change occurs: ❌ (Physical change, not chemical.)
3. Mixing Vinegar and Baking Soda
- A physical change occurs: ❌ (A chemical reaction occurs: Vinegar (acetic acid) + Baking Soda (sodium bicarbonate) → Carbon dioxide + Water + Sodium acetate. So it’s a chemical change, not physical.)
- The chemical makeup of the substance changes: ✔️ (Reactants (vinegar, baking soda) are converted into new products (CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate), so chemical makeup changes.)
- A new chemical substance is produced: ✔️ (New substances (CO₂, H₂O, sodium acetate) are formed.)
- A chemical change occurs: ✔️ (Chemical reaction with new substances formed.)
Final Chart (Checkboxes):
| Characteristics of a Chemical Change | Popping an Inflated Balloon | Dissolving Sugar in Water | Mixing Vinegar and Baking Soda |
|---|---|---|---|
| The chemical makeup of the substance changes. | ❌ | ❌ | ☑️ |
| A new chemical substance is produced. | ❌ | ❌ | ☑️ |
| A chemical change occurs. | ❌ | ❌ | ☑️ |
(Note: For each row, check the box if the statement applies to the example.)