Drying clothes would be a physical change. The clothes themselves do not change either chemically or physically, so one needs to consider the removal or liquid water from the clothes. This is simply a phase change of H2O liquid to H2O vapor (steam). It is still H2O either way, so there is no chemical change. It would be a physical change.
The drying itself is (always) a physical change.
physical change because the clothes themselves do not change
Yes because like if you wet a paper and let it dry out is it still paper????? yes so the state of the matter might change but when the process is complete the matter is still the same.....
It's a physical change.
yes because its still clothes
Physical
Chemical
Drying clothes represents a physical change, not a chemical change. The process simply converts liquid water to gaseous water, so it's only a change in state.
The water is merely going from a liquid state to a gas state. Its chemical identity remains the same.
Physical. Because you can reverse it by drying it out.
Gasoline evaporation is a physical process.
The answer is lighting a match box because when doing so, the match goes into flames and flammability is a chemical change. When cutting a snowflake, the substances do not change, neither does it change when drying wet clothes. The person earlier said drying wet clothes, but he/she is wrong because when you dry wet clothes, the water goes through a physical change called evaporation, which is NOT a chemical change. I hope this helps. Good luck on your chapter assessments(I'm doing mine too). :)
Drying clothes represents a physical change, not a chemical change. The process simply converts liquid water to gaseous water, so it's only a change in state.
The water is merely going from a liquid state to a gas state. Its chemical identity remains the same.
The drying itself is (always) a physical change.
Yes.
With a physical reaction, some of the substance changes, but the stubstance is still the same. A chemical reaction on the other hand, is hard to reverse. Physical: freezing of water, drying of clothes, mixing of iorn nails and sand Chemical: cooking of food
physical
Drying is a physical process (because evaporation is a physical change), not a property.
Yes
Ignition of a match is a chemical process.
yes
Drying (involving only the water evaporation) is a physical change.
Physical, it is still H2O