No because in an exothermic change energy is released not taken in. Melting would be an example of exothermic change.
Yes, freezing is an example of an exothermic chemical change because it involves the release of heat energy as the substance changes from a liquid to a solid state.
Freezing is an exothermic process because heat is released when a substance changes from a liquid to a solid, lowering the temperature of the surroundings.
Freezing water is a physical change, as it involves a phase transition from a liquid to a solid state without altering the chemical composition of water molecules.
Freezing point is a physical property. The actual freezing is a physical change.
Yes, if it occurs as the result of a chemical reaction. For example, if two clear colorless solutions form a white precipitate (solid) when mixed, that would be an example of a chemical change. The formation of a solid from freezing is a physical change.
It is an endothermic reaction. It absorbs heat while freezing.
Freezing is an exothermic process because heat is released when a substance changes from a liquid to a solid, lowering the temperature of the surroundings.
It is an exothermic change
condensation freezing and deposition
An exothermic change is a change that releases heat. Combustion is an exothermic chemical reaction.Adding water to sulfuric acid releases heat, called exothermic heat of mixing. Exothermic changes are the opposite of endothermic changes that absorb heat when they take place.
Freezing water is a physical change, as it involves a phase transition from a liquid to a solid state without altering the chemical composition of water molecules.
An exothermic reaction is a chemical reaction that releases energy either in the form of heat or light. All combusion reactions, for example, are exothermic.
The freezing of water is an example of phase change.
Freezing is not a chemical reaction, it is a phase change. There is a certain amount of heat that is required to liquefy any substance, and that heat can be recovered, so in that sense, you can extract heat from the process of freezing. This is quite different from the way that heat that is released by a fire, but in some sense both are exothermic processes.
it is a chemical change
No, That would be a physical change....A chemical change would be for like example: Water Evaporting, Water Boiling, Water Freezing...etc
A reaction in which heat is given out.
non example of chemical change: one non example is ice. ice is NOT an example of chemical change.