It is always categorized as a Physical change as no new substance with different properties forms.
No. Making mixtures are physical changes and the chemical substances will not change.
Burning of sulfur (or anything else) is a chemical change, not a physical change.
It is a chemical change, an oxidation reaction.
Crushing a lump of roll sulfur is a physical change, as the chemical composition of the sulfur remains the same. The process only alters the physical state of the sulfur without changing its chemical properties.
chemichal
No, this is a chemical change.
This is a chemical change because there is a molecular change in the composition. A physical change results when the size, shape, phase, texture etc. of a substance changes. Liquid water heated to water vapor is a physical change.
Crushing a lump of sulfur would be considered a physical change because the chemical composition of sulfur remains the same before and after crushing. No new substances are formed during the process.
Burning sulfur, or burning anything, is a chemical change.
Burning sulfur, or burning anything, is a chemical change.
Heating sulfur is a physical change. You're not changing the chemical composition of the sulfur, just the temperature. Now if you heat it to its boiling point and and it changes to a vapor it's a chemical change because you've changed its state of matter.(Actually changing the state of matter of an object is still a physical change, as it does not change the chemical composition of the element)
It is a physical change, the chemical form remain unchanged.