Burning toast is a CHEMICAL change. A physical change is reversable-for example,
you can freeze water into a cube and then defrost and reconvert to water.
Burning is always a chemical change. In order for something to burn, some of the original substance must be lost and therefore cannot be turned back into its original form
chemical
Burning toast would be a chemical change. The bread would be changed into carbon and the reaction can not be reversed.
It is kind of both....The chemical: The toast loses its water molecules and so loses most of its H2O.The Physical: The toast becomes hard and crunchy from soft and airy.Added:The toast burning is a total physical change, not chemical. Water loss from the toast is not a chemical change as species have not changed partners ( atoms have not rearranged into new species ) and H2O remains the molecule H2O, water.
It is kind of both....The chemical: The toast loses its water molecules and so loses most of its H2O.The Physical: The toast becomes hard and crunchy from soft and airy.Added:The toast burning is a total physical change, not chemical. Water loss from the toast is not a chemical change as species have not changed partners ( atoms have not rearranged into new species ) and H2O remains the molecule H2O, water.
Chemical
It is a chemical process.
Physical change.
A chemical change.
it is a physical change
physical
chemical change
Yes, it is. The process by which heat changes the molecules of the bread from white and soft to brown and crispy is a chemical change. A chemical change does NOT mean you have to add chemicals. It just means the chemicals (molecules) in the substance changed their chemistry. So slicing bread is a physical change, but toasting it is a chemical change.