It depends ont eh chemical change, because in some changes not all the components of the mixture are used.
when you separate a substance from a mixture, it's a physical change... Technically, you can get it back in the mixture.
A mixture cannot be separated with chemical change because a mixture is two or more substances which will retain their physical properties when combined. Mixtures are separated by physical means like filters, sifting, chromatography, centrifuge, electrophoresis and magnetic attraction depending on what the mixture is composed of.
Physical change is preferable because it is easier than chemical method.
Macaroni is a mixture not a change.
A physical change is needed to separate a mixture into its components. This can be achieved through processes like filtration, distillation, chromatography, or evaporation, which rely on the differences in physical properties between the components of the mixture.
A mixture that produces a chemical reaction, scientifically speaking, is a chemical change.
A mixture is a combination of two or more subtances.Subtances in a mixture can be separated.This means that they are chemically combined.I would prefer physical change cause mixtures are made by physically combining two or more subtances.The solids,liquids,or gases in a mixture are not chemically combined.They can be easily seperated.
By definition, a mixture is two or more substances that are physically combined. In a chemical change, the substance interacts with another substance and undergoes a chemical change. So, no, a mixture is not a chemical change.
physical change
Bread is not a change. It is a mixture of substances that can undergo physical and chemical changes.
When chemicals are mixed together without any chemical change, they form a mixture since there is no chemical change the substances in the mixture can be seperated .Solutions are an example of a mixture
They have different molecular weights and chemical/physical properties.