Yes , it should or else it is a physical property
Yes. If you observe a chemical property, the substance will be undergoing a chemical change, which by definition produces a new substance.
No. You might observe the pH of a liquid- without forming a new substance.
No
no!
Yes. If you observe a chemical property, the substance will be undergoing a chemical change, which by definition produces a new substance.
Yes. If you observe a chemical property, the substance will be undergoing a chemical change, which by definition produces a new substance.
The formation of a new substance is the criterion for a chemical change. You can't have a chemical change without the formation of at least one new substance. As you can't observe a chemical property without setting a chemical change in motion, the answer to your question is yes.
Flammability is an example of the chemical property.
The properties mix together with the mixture.
only when a change occurs and a new substance is formed
only when a change occurs and a new substance is formed
Yes, and here is the reason: The Definition of a chemical property is a property in which a substance has a potential to change Identity under certain circumstances in that manner of chemical change. If this substance changes identity, then new substances are produced from the matter that was changed.
The substance formed in a chemical change is called Product.
A product is a substance that is formed by a chemical reaction.
Melting doesn't change the composition of a compound (substance).Burning is a chemical reaction, an oxidation - new compounds are formed.