yes it would, because of the overall time, mostier (such as rain) would cause the rust to form and decay faster
Rusting of iron is a chemical process, an oxydation reaction.
The rusting of an iron pole is a chemical change. An example of a chemical change would be crumbling a piece of paper. When you are crumbling this piece of paper, the contents of the paper have not change and you are able to uncrumble the paper there is no difference except the paper has wrinkles. :) However in an example of chemical change like a metal rusting, you cannot un-rust it, it was chemically changed. Another example of a chemical change would be burning a piece of paper to ashes.
The rusting of an iron pole is a chemical change. An example of a chemical change would be crumbling a piece of paper. When you are crumbling this piece of paper, the contents of the paper have not change and you are able to uncrumble the paper there is no difference except the paper has wrinkles. :) However in an example of chemical change like a metal rusting, you cannot un-rust it, it was chemically changed. Another example of a chemical change would be burning a piece of paper to ashes.
Rust its self is a chemical change, but a chemical property for a car would be that it gets rusty over time.
yes. rust is a chemical change that occurs when you mix iron, air, and water. it reacts with the iron and actually erodes it. a n example of a physical change would be the bending or cutting of iron.
Rusting of iron is a chemical process, an oxydation reaction.
rusting
The rusting of an iron pole is a chemical change. An example of a chemical change would be crumbling a piece of paper. When you are crumbling this piece of paper, the contents of the paper have not change and you are able to uncrumble the paper there is no difference except the paper has wrinkles. :) However in an example of chemical change like a metal rusting, you cannot un-rust it, it was chemically changed. Another example of a chemical change would be burning a piece of paper to ashes.
The rusting of an iron pole is a chemical change. An example of a chemical change would be crumbling a piece of paper. When you are crumbling this piece of paper, the contents of the paper have not change and you are able to uncrumble the paper there is no difference except the paper has wrinkles. :) However in an example of chemical change like a metal rusting, you cannot un-rust it, it was chemically changed. Another example of a chemical change would be burning a piece of paper to ashes.
A rusting nail is the oxidation of iron, in which the iron in the nail and the oxygen in the air react to form a new substance, iron oxide, with different properties from the iron and the oxygen.
Some chemical changes are baking a cake and a rusting bicycle.Another chemical changes could be:Nail rustingWood burningSouring of milkDigestingColoring hairSome chemical changes are rusting of iron, food metabolizing in the body, milk going sour, grilling a hamburger, and electroplating a metal.
Rust its self is a chemical change, but a chemical property for a car would be that it gets rusty over time.
yes. rust is a chemical change that occurs when you mix iron, air, and water. it reacts with the iron and actually erodes it. a n example of a physical change would be the bending or cutting of iron.
It would be a chemical change.
It's not the rusty bike it's the rusting of the bike. rust forms in a process called oxidation, or when iron comes in contact with oxygen. Also one reason you can tell it's a chemical change is when you can't reverse the process. Or when it involves changing the chemical compound.
This reaction is called thermal decomposition or thermal degradation; example: CaCO3 = CaO + CO2
A chemical change that gives off heat. Burning paper would be an example.