Yes. Silver tarnishing is a chemical change.
The actual tarnishing action is a chemical change, as a new compound (silver oxide) is formed.
Chemical Change duuh. Go to science class dumby.
Yes, it is a physical change that occurs due to a chemical process, oxygen combines with the silver to produce an oxide, the "tarnish" you see. ^Correction. It is a chemical change. Gogo gen chem hw.
2 Ag + S = Ag2S
Tarnishing of silver is the same process as rusting of steel . . . they are both chemical processes involving the formation of compounds with oxygen.
It is a chemical change. Oxygen from the air combined chemically with the silver to form silver oxide- that is the tarnish.
The tarnishing of silver is due to a reaction with hydrogen sulfide. Because the end result of the tarnish is silver sulfide, it is a chemical change.
The tarnishing of silver is due to a reaction with hydrogen sulfide. Because the end result of the tarnish is silver sulfide, it is a chemical change.
Chemical Change.--its tarnish!
Chemical Change.--its tarnish!
Chemical Change.--its tarnish!
YES
The tarnish on silver is due to oxidization
Tarnish on silver is Silver Oxide, which is oxidised silver. This is indeed a chemical reaction.
The actual tarnishing action is a chemical change, as a new compound (silver oxide) is formed.
It's a chemical change. A thin layer of silver on the surface reacts with oxygen in the air - to form silver oxide.
The tarnishing of silver is due to a reaction with hydrogen sulfide. Because the end result of the tarnish is silver sulfide, it is a chemical change.