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work together to create a rule to help to determine if a change is cons…

Question

work together to create a rule to help to determine if a change is considered to be a physical change or chemical change. use the rule to categorize the following: physical changes melting ice into water, tearing paper, rusting iron, cutting paper, baking a cake, crushing a soda can, boiling water chemical changes burning, vinegar reacting with baking soda making bubbles, milk souring, dissolving sugar in water

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
Rule:
  • Physical Change: A change where the substance's chemical identity remains the same (no new substance formed). It involves changes in state (solid ↔ liquid ↔ gas), shape, size, or physical separation. Examples: phase changes (melting, boiling), cutting, tearing, crushing.
  • Chemical Change: A change where a new substance is formed (involves chemical reactions, often with signs like color change, gas production, precipitate, heat/light, or odor change). Examples: rusting, burning, souring, reactions (vinegar + baking soda).
Categorization:
Physical Changes (no new substance):
  • Melting ice into water (phase change, H₂O remains H₂O).
  • Tearing paper (shape change, paper is still paper).
  • Cutting paper (size/shape change, paper is still paper).
  • Crushing a soda can (shape change, metal is still metal).
  • Boiling water (phase change, H₂O remains H₂O).
Chemical Changes (new substance formed):
  • Rusting iron (Fe → Fe₂O₃, new compound).
  • Baking a cake (chemical reactions, new substances like CO₂, baked dough).
  • Burning (combustion, new substances like CO₂, H₂O).
  • Vinegar reacting with baking soda (CO₂ gas, new substances like NaC₂H₃O₂).
  • Milk souring (lactic acid formed, new substance).
  • Note: Dissolving sugar in water is physical (sugar dissolves, no new substance; it’s a mixture). If misclassified, correct it: dissolving sugar is physical.

Answer:

Rule:
  • Physical Change: No new substance formed (changes in state, shape, size, or mixture without reaction).
  • Chemical Change: New substance formed (via reactions, with signs like gas, precipitate, heat, odor, color change).
Categorized:
Physical Changes:
  • Melting ice into water
  • Tearing paper
  • Cutting paper
  • Crushing a soda can
  • Boiling water
  • Dissolving sugar in water (corrected, as it’s a physical mixture)
Chemical Changes:
  • Rusting iron
  • Baking a cake
  • Burning
  • Vinegar reacting with baking soda (making bubbles)
  • Milk souring