Concept explainers
Classify each of the following as aphysical or chemicalchange or property.
- A fireplace poker glows red when you heat it in the fire.
(a)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
A fireplace poker glows red when you heat it in the fire.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Physical change.
Explanation of Solution
A fireplace poker is metal iron. At high temperature the iron metal glows red hot in the heat of the fire. This a physical change as there is change in the appearance of fire iron but no change in its chemical composition.
(b)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
A marshmallow turns black when toasted too long in a campfire.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Chemical change.
Explanation of Solution
A marshmallow is made up of water and gelatine. When marshmallow is toasted too long in the campfire, the sugar which is made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen undergoes an oxidation reaction. Sugar is finally converted into char which is simply carbon. Marshmallow appears black due to the conversion of sugar to carbon by a chemical reaction. So this is a chemical change.
(c)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
Hydrogen peroxide dental strips will make your teeth whiter.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Chemical change.
Explanation of Solution
Hydrogen peroxide is a bleaching agent. Hydrogen peroxide in dental strips can help in whitening teeth by bleaching it. Thus bleaching or whitening of teeth by hydrogen peroxide is a chemical change.
(d)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
If you wash your jeans with chlorine bleach, they will fade.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Chemical change.
Explanation of Solution
The chlorine in the bleach will oxidize the dye in the jeans, thus causing the color of the jeans to fade. Here chlorine is carrying out an oxidation reaction; hence the fading of jeans on treatment with chlorine bleach is a chemical change.
(e)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
If you spill some nail polish remover on your skin, it will evaporate quickly.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Physical change.
Explanation of Solution
Nail polish remover has volatile liquids such as acetone, or ethyl acetate. Both these solvents in nail polish remover easily evaporate at room temperature. Here the volatile liquids are undergoing a phase change from liquid to gas. So this is a physical change from the liquid phase to gaseous phase.
(f)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
When making ice cream at home, salt is added to lower the temperature of the ice being used to freeze the mixture.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Physical change.
Explanation of Solution
Freezing point of a substance is its physical property. When adding salt reduces the freezing point of ice then the ice goes through a physical change. There is no change in the chemical composition of ice.
(g)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
A hair clog in your bathroom sink can be cleared with drain cleaner.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Chemical change.
Explanation of Solution
Liquid drain clog remover is a great substitute for baking soda and vinegar. Many commercially available drain cleaners contain high concentration of sulphuric acid. Concentrated sulphuric acid is highly effective in removing hair and grease from the bathroom sink. There is a chemical reaction between sulphuric acid and the grease. So cleaning a hair clog in the bathroom sink with a drain cleaner is a chemical change.
(h)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
The perfume your boyfriend gave you for your first birthday smells like flowers.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Physical change.
Explanation of Solution
Perfume is made up of different substances which include flowers, wood, resins, fruits, alcohol and more. The liquid perfume is volatile at room temperature. Perfume in the gaseous state smells like perfume. This is a physical change as the liquid perfume changes to gaseous perfume.
(i)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
Mothballs pass directly into the gaseous state in your closet without first melting.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Chemical change.
Explanation of Solution
Mothballs are made of naphthalene or paradichlorobenzene both of which volatilize into the air. Mothball is solid in appearance. Sublimation involves the direct conversion of solid mothball to gaseous state. Here only the appearance of mothball is changing from solid to gas. Hence it is a physical change.
(j)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
A log of wood is chopped up with an axe into smaller pieces of wood.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Physical change.
Explanation of Solution
This is a physical change as the original wood is chopped into small pieces. So there is only a change in the appearance of wood but no change in the chemical composition of the wood.
(k)
Interpretation:
The following change should be classified as a physical or chemical change or property:
A log of wood is burned in a fireplace.
Concept Introduction:
Chemical change occurs in a chemical reaction where there is a change in the composition of the reactants to form new products. On the other hand physical change occurs when there is a difference in the appearance, odor of the substance without a change in its chemical composition.
Answer to Problem 18QAP
Chemical change.
Explanation of Solution
Wood is made up of cellulose, hemicelluloses and lignin, which are mostly hydrocarbon. So when wood is burned in oxygen heat is released along with the release of carbon dioxide and water vapour. So this is a physical change as after burning the original wood is converted into ash, carbon dioxide and water vapour.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 3 Solutions
Introductory Chemistry: Foundation - Text (Looseleaf)
- What is the lone pair or charge that surrounds the nitrogen here to give it that negative charge?arrow_forwardLast Name, Firs Statifically more chances to abstract one of these 6H 11. (10pts total) Consider the radical chlorination of 1,3-diethylcyclohexane depicted below. 4 • 6H total $ 4th total 21 total 4H total ZH 2H Statistical H < 3°C-H werkst - product bund abstraction here leads to the mo favored a) (6pts) How many unique mono-chlorinated products can be formed and what are the structures for the thermodynamically and statistically favored products? Proclict 6 Number of Unique Mono-Chlorinated Products f Thermodynamically Favored Product Statistically Favored Product b) (4pts) Draw the arrow pushing mechanism for the FIRST propagation step (p-1) for the formation of the thermodynamically favored product. Only draw the p-1 step. You do not need to include lone pairs of electrons. No enthalpy calculation necessary 'H H-Cl Waterfoxarrow_forward2. (a) Many main group oxides form acidic solutions when added to water. For example solid tetraphosphorous decaoxide reacts with water to produce phosphoric acid. Write a balanced chemical equation for this reaction. (b) Calcium phosphate reacts with silicon dioxide and carbon graphite at elevated temperatures to produce white phosphorous (P4) as a gas along with calcium silicate (Silcate ion is SiO3²-) and carbon monoxide. Write a balanced chemical equation for this reaction.arrow_forward
- this is an organic chemistry question please answer accordindly!! please post the solution in your hand writing not an AI generated answer please draw the figures and structures if needed to support your explanation hand drawn only!!!! answer the question in a very simple and straight forward manner thanks!!!!! im reposting this please solve all parts and draw it not just word explanations!!arrow_forward2B: The retrosynthetic cut below provides two options for a Suzuki coupling, provide the identities of A, B, C and D then identify which pairing is better and justify your choice. O₂N. Retro-Suzuki NO2 MeO OMe A + B OR C + Darrow_forwardthis is an organic chemistry question please answer accordindly!! please post the solution in your hand writing not an AI generated answer please draw the figures and structures if needed to support your explanation hand drawn only!!!! answer the question in a very simple and straight forward manner thanks!!!!! im reposting this please solve all parts and draw it not just word explanations!!arrow_forward
- General Chemistry - Standalone book (MindTap Cour...ChemistryISBN:9781305580343Author:Steven D. Gammon, Ebbing, Darrell Ebbing, Steven D., Darrell; Gammon, Darrell Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon, Darrell D.; Gammon, Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon; DarrellPublisher:Cengage LearningWorld of Chemistry, 3rd editionChemistryISBN:9781133109655Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan L. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCostePublisher:Brooks / Cole / Cengage LearningChemistry: The Molecular ScienceChemistryISBN:9781285199047Author:John W. Moore, Conrad L. StanitskiPublisher:Cengage Learning
- General, Organic, and Biological ChemistryChemistryISBN:9781285853918Author:H. Stephen StokerPublisher:Cengage LearningIntroductory Chemistry: A FoundationChemistryISBN:9781337399425Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCostePublisher:Cengage LearningChemistryChemistryISBN:9781305957404Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCostePublisher:Cengage Learning