Mixing lemonade powder into water is a chemical change. This is because the powder changes the water molecules and can not be taken out.
No it is physical
physical change
physical because its changing states
No, mixing sugar and chocolate is not a chemical change. It's a physical change.
No it's a chemical change
To call it an physical or chemical change, we first need to describe both of them briefly. A physical change is the one which does not change the chemical properties of a substance. A chemical change is the one which changes the chemical properties of a substance. Whether they can be recovered or not is not of importance here. So if you mean to dissolve some powder in hot water such that it does not make any reaction with water, then its a physical change. (Mixing flour or salt or sugar powder are examples) However if you put some powder in hot water which creates a reaction and the molecules of that powder are no longer the same, then it would be a chemical change. (Adding tiny sodium or potassium pieces to water are examples)
It is a physical change because the reaction can easily be reversed and no heat is involved.
A physical change in contrast to a chemical change is one in which the chemical structure of the compounds involved are left unchanged. Only a physical change occurs. One such example is boiling water. This changes the physical state of water from a liquid to a gas. Similarly, freezing water is a physical reaction. In this case, liquid is frozen to form a solid.
physical change
No it is physical
No.
physical 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. :-)
Physical
If you are talking about adding a pack of powder to some liquid then this is a physical change. The powder is being dissolved in the liquid and therefore undergoing a change of state, this is however reversible by evaporating the liquid of to leave you with a solid mass (the original powder just not broken up)
No, it is physical
Mixing salt and pepper is a physical change
Physical
It depends on what you are mixing it with.
it is a chemical change