After my opinion smoke is a chemical hazard but also physical.
Microbiological, chemical, physical.
Not directly. It can be a physical hazard. The only connection to chemical hazards is that dangerous chemicals might be stored in glass containers, and released by breakage. Laboratory containers may contain many dangerous chemicals, and individual chemicals that are dangerous if combined.
Burning a sticky note is a chemical change. It involves the combustion of the paper, which results in the production of new substances, such as ash, smoke, and gases.
Burning wood is a chemical change - although, like most chemical changes it is accompanied by a physical change. Usually we reserve the term physical changes for things like erosion, melting, or evaporation where no change in composition occurs.
no
physical hazard,mechanical hazard,chemical hazard,electric shock hazard,crt monitor high voltage hazard.
physical hazard affects you physically but a biological or chemical hazard affect you from within. Physical hazards may cause injuries such as broken leg, cuts, wounds, etc. while biological/chemical hazards can cause injuries such as choking, inability to breath, internal bleeding .
Smoke is not a change but a complex mixture; producing smoke is a chemical process.
physical hazard,mechanical hazard,chemical hazard,electric shock hazard,crt monitor high voltage hazard.
Microbiological, chemical, physical.
what type of hazards like bio logical, chemical or physical
what is a CBRN hazard marker for a chemical hazard
physical, chemical, biological, ergonomic and psycological hazards
chemical change Madison and Kayla were here ;)
It's not a physical change. Rather, it is a sign of an already completed chemical reaction.
Dry ice doesn't "turn into smoke". Dry ice causes moisture in the air to condense, forming fog. This is a purely physical, not chemical, change.
Biological, Chemical, Physical These are the 3 hazard categories used in HACCP plans.