It's a physical property, because physical properties are color, smell, freezing point, boiling point, melting point, apprearance, or repulsion (diamagnetic) to magnets, opacity, viscosity and density.
Physical property. Common physical properties are color, taste and odor.
The smell of vinegar is a not a chemical property. It is a physical property.
You smell things by receiving their molecules into your olfactory sensors.
It's not a property but it is a physical process.
The smell of a substance is a chemical property.
Physical properties: liquid state at room temperature; characteristic smell Chemical properties: acidic (aqueous acetic/ethanoic acid)
Yes, acidity and pH is chemical property.
Physical property
1. Pure natural gas (CH) doesn't smell. 2. Smell is a chemical property of substances because is caused by specific molecules.
Odor; Physical
Reactivity is a chemical property (in chemistry !).
Your SENSE of smell is physical, but smells are created by chemical interactions.
Physical properties: liquid state at room temperature; characteristic smell Chemical properties: acidic (aqueous acetic/ethanoic acid)
No. Reactivity to vinegar is an example of a chemical property.
vinegar
Yes, it is a chemical property.
chemical i think vinegar with bicarb produces co2
Because that is just a natural property of acetic acid, which is the chemical name for what is in vinegar. White vinegar is just acetic acid and enough water to give a 5% concentration. Dark vinegar is natural vinegar which has been filtered, but not distilled. While they smell different, they both have the acetic acid smell in common.
Yes, acidity and pH is chemical property.
The reaction between vinegar (acetic acid) and baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) is a chemical reaction (property). CH3COOH + NaHCO3 ==> CH3COONa + CO2(g) + H2O
Physical property
Physical property