Yes
The flow of this liquid is a physical phenomenon; but the formation of this "syrup" is a chemical change.
This is a physical change.
A chemical change involves a change in a substance's chemical make-up or conversion to a different substance. A physical change is one that involves changes in a substance's physical makeup that is not brought about by a chemical change, such as sugar dissolving in water. Therefore, mixing milk and chocolate syrup is not a chemical change. Now, if for some reason the syrup had a strong enough acid in it, and mixing the two made the milk curdle or solidify, then yes, it would be a chemical change.
This is a physical process.
Yes, as well as a chemical change. It clearly changes (white, granulated sugar and liquid to burned brown sugar and liquid to a sticky [and delicious] substance). It changes from a solution to a syrup!
Mixing without a reaction is not a chemical change.
The flow of this liquid is a physical phenomenon; but the formation of this "syrup" is a chemical change.
This is a physical change.
Physical change
physical change
Dissolution is a physical change.
A chemical change involves a change in a substance's chemical make-up or conversion to a different substance. A physical change is one that involves changes in a substance's physical makeup that is not brought about by a chemical change, such as sugar dissolving in water. Therefore, mixing milk and chocolate syrup is not a chemical change. Now, if for some reason the syrup had a strong enough acid in it, and mixing the two made the milk curdle or solidify, then yes, it would be a chemical change.
This is a physical process.
Yes, as well as a chemical change. It clearly changes (white, granulated sugar and liquid to burned brown sugar and liquid to a sticky [and delicious] substance). It changes from a solution to a syrup!
Malt syrup does not have a chemical formula. It is a mixture. Sugar and other stuff are in it.
yes
no because itjust changes color and taste wich is a physical property