If you notice that a compound is composed only of 1 of certain elements, you can deduct they are ionicly bonded. The 7 chemicals are Hydrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Bromine, Iodine, Nitrogen and Chlorine. If you discover a new one contact me at natevd95. Hope this is helpful.
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Two ways to be able to identify a physical property are the color and the concistancy.
Shiny and silvery are not chemical properties. These are physical properties.
Ductility, the property of a substance to be drawn out into a thin wire is a physical property associated with some metals, such as gold, silver and copper.
Chemical properties cannot be observed without changing its composition. ie: oxidation numbers Physical properties are properties such as melting point and boiling point. All that is needed to observe these are by placing the compound in a melting point apparatus etc.
Sodium chloride is a chemical compound (NaCl), not a property.
Salt is a chemical compound. It has chemical and physical properties.
Acetone is a chemical. It has both chemical and physical properties.
Physical because a substance can be a solid, liquid, or gas and still have the properties of that element/compound
The state of matter of a element or compound is linked to its melting and boiling points which are both physical properties. Also if the element/compound is a solid you could say physical properties on the type of structure it would form
For example the melting point.
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physical property
Evaporation is a physical process.
What is the question exactly? If it is about Uranium having physical and/or chemical properties, the answer is that it has both. Every single element and compound in this universe has both physical and chemical properties.
It is a chemical property as air sensitive compounds react with oxygen or air to yield a different compound. Physical properties don't alter the composition of the compound but rather the behaviour through different molecular arrangement.
A physical property is a characteristic that can be observed or measured without changing the identity of the substance. Using the 5 senses.