No this will not make a chemical change because if you put copper in baking soda it will make a physical change because it is not changing any of the properties inside the copper.
it is a chemical change Sodium carbonate + Copper sulfate react to make Sodium sulfate + Copper carbonate
For example by boiling or baking.
One chemical change of baking soda is adding vinegar to it. You know, the old volcano experiment. I think you mean the chemical formula? In that case, it's NaHCO3. Otherwise, you make no sense.
Baking a cake is a chemical change because the baking powder or soda (whichever one) undergoes a chemical reaction. you can tell because of the bumps or air bubbles. Not only that, but the chemical change is irreversible, you put the ingredients that make up the cake together and you can't change them back. The ingredients don't go back to their original form. You can tell it's a chemical change becaue of the heat, rising, and odor.
A chemical change is any kind of reaction that changes the chemical make up of a compound. Chemical changes are mostly irreversable. Such as: Burning wood Baking a cake (batter to cake stuffs) Digesting food (food to feces) etc.
No, it is chemical change. Heat is added therefore changing the make-up from a liquid state to a solid state.
Baking soda or any carbonate.
Physical change - make it frozen ; Chemical change - make it spoiled
It is first a physical change, but depending on the ingredients being mixed it may be followed by chemical changes.
Baking powder is not a gas, but it does make a cake rise by releasing carbon dioxide into the batter through chemical reaction.
Yes - It changes the bonds between atoms, making different molecules.
Sulphuric acid, because "sulphuric" is what gives copper sulphate it's name