no, the substances that you mix must interact to form a completely new substance for a chemical change to take place. Mixing sand and salt is not a chemical change. Mixing vinegar with sodium bicarbonate will lead to the release of carbon dioxide gas. This is a chemical change.
Adding a base to an acid or vice versa in changing the chemical properties of that solution. In both cases you are neuralizing the solution. There might be a physical change as well, but it would depend on what chemicals where mixing. But this reaction will definitely have a chemical change.
Mixing with water is a physical change because the chemical composition of the substances remains the same before and after mixing. Physical properties refer to characteristics that can be observed or measured without changing the composition of the substance.
It depends on what you are mixing it with.
Dissociation involves breaking apart into ions, while dissolving involves mixing with a solvent without changing the chemical structure.
Adding a base to an acid or vice versa in changing the chemical properties of that solution. In both cases you are neuralizing the solution. There might be a physical change as well, but it would depend on what chemicals where mixing. But this reaction will definitely have a chemical change.
the result that comes by mixing the chemical to chemical
chemical
Typical mixing have not a chemical ecuation.
chemical
The act of mixing chemicals is a physical process, not a chemical reaction. Mixing chemicals together may, or may not, allow a chemical reaction to proceed, depending on the nature of the chemicals being mixed.
Yes, mixing milk with chocolate is just a physical and not a chemical action.
No, mixing Elmer's glue and liquid starch is a physical change. A chemical change involves the formation of new substances with different chemical properties, while mixing these two substances does not result in a chemical reaction.