Only corrosive chemicals can burn through steel and wood.
The chemical energy in the wood that allows it to burn is transferred to heat, light, and sound energy.
The chemical energy from a tree can be changed into thermal energy when you burn the tree's wood.
Stick to woodDont' get all fancy. Stick to natural wood and the artificial logs. The former is better because the artificial logs don't have a pleasant aroma.
No. The wood that you made the chair out of is still wood, so it is just a physical change.
Use the "tan of the inclination angle" test.
Fire burn changes the wood chemical.
When you burn wood a chemical change occurs.
Neither. It is a chemical change. The ability of wood to burn is a chemical property.
chemical change
I don't think there is any that can't burn through wood, but can burn through metal.
Steel
You can burn it, but it cannot be re-done. You can't make ash into wood.
Chemical Energy. Chemical energy is converted to thermal energy when people burn wood in a fireplace or burn gasoline in a car's engine.
bathing time the soap melts when we burn paper when we cook when we burn wood when we burn food
If battery acid is dropped on wood it will damage the wood.
steel is clearly stronger than wood it is hard to break through with an axe unlike wood which can be broken within three hits
The chemical energy in the wood that allows it to burn is transferred to heat, light, and sound energy.