The sugar might dissolve in the acid and get added to the solution.
its a chemical lol
Sugar changing to alcohol is a chemical change.
Yes, as well as a chemical change. It clearly changes (white, granulated sugar and liquid to burned brown sugar and liquid to a sticky [and delicious] substance). It changes from a solution to a syrup!
Physical. The sugar is only held in suspension. The basic reasoning behind this is that you have to stir the sugar in to get it mixed into the lemonade. A chemical change would have been generated just by mixing the chemicals together and given some type of reaction.(Heat, smoke, light, etc) You don't get a "bang" by adding sugar to lemonade. :-)
Powdering sugar does not change it chemically.
its a chemical lol
Adding sugar to tea
It would be physical change.
Yes it is a physical change. When the sugar is dissolved in the tea, the sugar retains its property of sweetness. And you could let the tea evaporate and you would have the original sugar left in the container.
This is not a chemical change. The food colouring forms part of the mixture on the icing sugar + flavouring + water + colouring. A chemical change requires there to be a change in the nature of the ingredients eg cooking eggs.
Sugar is a (chemical) compound, but not a change at all.
It is a chemical change because sugar is decomposed.
Sugar changing to alcohol is a chemical change.
Yes, as well as a chemical change. It clearly changes (white, granulated sugar and liquid to burned brown sugar and liquid to a sticky [and delicious] substance). It changes from a solution to a syrup!
yes, it is a chemical change.
Physical. The sugar is only held in suspension. The basic reasoning behind this is that you have to stir the sugar in to get it mixed into the lemonade. A chemical change would have been generated just by mixing the chemicals together and given some type of reaction.(Heat, smoke, light, etc) You don't get a "bang" by adding sugar to lemonade. :-)
Sugar is a chemical compound or rather a group of compounds containing carbon oxygen and hydrogen, not a chemical change.