Neither. It is a chemical change. The ability of wood to burn is a chemical property.
when wood rots it is a physical change and not a chemical change.
chemical.
making paper from wood is a what change
It is a chemical change.
Fireworks and wood burning are good examples of fast chemical reactions =]
No wood is not a chemical property.
heart wood..... soft wood is any fast-grown wood like pine. Heart wood is the name for any of the inner lays of wood of any tree i.e. its in its heart
The rotting of wood is a chemical change because of many reasons. One of the reasons is because when wood rots, it produces mold, which is a new substance. The definition of chemical change is a change that produces one or more new substances. When the wood rots, you are unable to take the rotted wood and mold and make it back into wood that is yet to be rotted. So because the wood produces one (or more) new substances, the rotting of wood is a chemical change.
Neither. It is a chemical change. The ability of wood to burn is a chemical property.
This is the formula for Methanol, also known as wood alcohol. (Most of the Methanol on the market is actually sourced from petroleum, not wood, as it's cheaper and quicker to get it that way.)
Fire burn changes the wood chemical.
When you burn wood a chemical change occurs.
no, breaking wood is a physical change.If the wood was burned, that would be chemical change
when wood rots it is a physical change and not a chemical change.
CH2O is the chemical makeup and formula of wood, this chemical formula is known as carbohydrate.
Rottening of wood is a chemical (breakdown) reaction