No. Crushing is a physical change.
Crushing doesn't change the chemical composition of the substance.
Crushing creates a physical change in the size of the pieces but it does not change their chemical make up.
The change in the crushed can appearance was caused by a physical change. When the can is crushed, the arrangement of its particles is altered, but no new substances are formed.
When you crush a piece of chalk you get lots of small pieces of chalk.It is only a physical change. It is not a chemical change.
Nope. That is a physical change. If I crush a cookie into powder, it is still cookie- no chemical change. The form and appearance have changed. But pour powdered cookie onto your tongue, and it is still cookie.
Pulverizing an aspirin tablet is a physical change (it is not a property at all). The chemical nature of the aspirin does not change when it is pulverized.
crush it
Burning is a chemical change.
When you break or crush an ionic compound, you are physically separating the individual ions that make up the compound. However, the chemical bonds between the ions remain intact, so the compound's chemical formula and properties are preserved. The compound may exhibit different physical properties, such as a change in shape or size, but its chemical composition remains the same.
It's a chemical change
its a chemical change
It is a chemical change.