That's a physical change.
Yes, it is reversible because you can just iron it to make it unwrinkled.
Physical
No, bleach changing the color of a shirt is a chemical change. The active ingredient in bleach, sodium hypochlorite, reacts with the dyes in the fabric, breaking them down and removing their color. This results in a permanent change in the chemical composition of the fabric.
The shirt is white because something is making it white and that something could have reacted with the blueberry juice. It depends on the juice and the material the shirt is made of. If the Juice can be squeezed out or removed with enough rinsing or washing, it may be just a physical change. Otherwise, the dye in the juice may have chemically bonded with something in the shirt material and may need a chemical substance such as a bleaching agent to neutralize it.
Wearing Something With HolesA Belt, fishnet stockings, a shirt (holes for the head, arms, torso), pants (holes for the waist and both feet), etc. Basically any form of clothing works if you think about what constitutes a "hole."People wear jeans with holes in them.Socks, underwear,shirt,jeans,stockings
Chemical...both when the bleach breaks down the stains in your shirt so it becomes white again, and when it breaks down the bonds in the cellulose your shirt's made of so it gets holes in it.
physical change plain and simple
Yes, it it a chemical change because you can't get the same exact t-shirt without out using chemical means to take it out.
Yes, it is reversible because you can just iron it to make it unwrinkled.
Physical
No, not a chemical change, since this does not change the material of the shirt.
No, bleach changing the color of a shirt is a chemical change. The active ingredient in bleach, sodium hypochlorite, reacts with the dyes in the fabric, breaking them down and removing their color. This results in a permanent change in the chemical composition of the fabric.
Ironing a shirt is a physical change, because you're not changing the shirt into something new, you're simply changing it's form-at the end, the shirt is still a shirt. In a physical change, you don't create any new substances-you still end up with what you started with, but perhaps in a different form (For instance, ice turning to water). A chemical change creates new chemical substances.
The shirt is white because something is making it white and that something could have reacted with the blueberry juice. It depends on the juice and the material the shirt is made of. If the Juice can be squeezed out or removed with enough rinsing or washing, it may be just a physical change. Otherwise, the dye in the juice may have chemically bonded with something in the shirt material and may need a chemical substance such as a bleaching agent to neutralize it.
When bleaching your shirt it is a chemical change.
A physical change is different than a chemical change, because in a physical change, the composition of the matter did not change. While in a chemical change, the composition of the matter did change.SO basically, the composition of the matter does not change is the difference between a physical change and a chemical change.yes
The holes may be button holes, air holes, or holes caused by damage to the shirt.