When a substance melts, it changes state from solid to liquid. This does not alter the substance's chemical composition, so melting point is a physical property. Flammability means burning, and when a substance burns, it reacts with oxygen to produce a new substance that was not there before. This is therefore a chemical property.
Flammability is an example of the chemical property.
physical
No, flammability is a chemical property, not a physical change. Flammability refers to a substance's ability to undergo combustion when exposed to a flame or spark, which involves a chemical reaction where new substances are formed.
"Burns easily" is a physical property of a material because it describes how the substance reacts to a specific type of external stimuli (in this case, heat or fire). It is not an inherent part of the substance's chemical composition.
chemical
Flammability is an example of the chemical property.
Flammability is a chemical property not a change; burning is a chemical change.
Stating that something is flammable is stating a chemical property. But the actual burning would be a chemical change.
Flammability is a physical chemical property of materials.Flammability is a chemical property.
Burning something is a chemical property. A physical property is an aspect of matter that can be measured without changing it. A chemical property may only be observed by changing the chemical identity of the substance.
Flammability is considered a chemical property because it involves how a substance will react with oxygen in a combustion reaction to produce heat and light. It is related to the chemical structure and composition of the material.
The flammability of ethanol is a physical property, as it describes how the substance behaves in the presence of an external factor (fire). It is not an inherent characteristic of ethanol's chemical structure.
chemical property
It's a chemical property.
physical
Burning is a chemical change, flammability is a chemical property.
yes