No, freezing water is a physical change, not a chemical one since no chemical reaction takes place. The water molecule (H2O) remains the same even though the physical state changes from a liquid to a solid.
No. Only a phasechange occurs from liquid water to solid water.
No, it actually represents a Physical Reaction.
NO. Freezing is a physical change.
Freezing is a chemical process.
Yes of course they dissolve, to make a broth. It's for flavouring.
Is this a riddle?
No. The phase change requires adding heat, so melting ice cubes is an endothermic reaction.
Ice from liquid water only involves a physical change, not a chemical change. As liquid water cools, the energy removed from the system allows a crystalline matrix to start forming between the partially charged molecules as there's no longer enough energy to break hydrogen bonding, resulting in the increased volume (and thus, lower density) of ice. However, no other chemicals are added or produced from the reaction. It purely depends on the energy of the system.
It's a physical change.. it can go back to the way it was before.
No, it is a physical change, not a chemical reaction.
Yes of course they dissolve, to make a broth. It's for flavouring.
Water becomes ice cubes in a freezer.
No, but ice cubes and a little scotch can soften a heart of stone.
No, it's a physical action. No chemicals change into any other chemicals.
Not if you want ice cubes.
Because your stupid.
yes
It took about 5 hours to get the 1st cubes
It can be Frisian in the freezer in to ice cubes
keep em in the freezer
Is this a riddle?