First of all, it's spelled chemical! second of all, its probably both, seeing it can be burned, and it can be crushed!
the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
Examples of substances include water, salt, oxygen, sugar, and gold. These are all materials that have distinct chemical compositions and physical properties.
Physical properties include characteristics of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing the substance's chemical composition. Examples include color, density, melting point, boiling point, and conductivity.
No, burning salt is not a characteristic property. The physical and chemical properties of salt remain the same whether it is burned or not.
Methanol is not a property of anything. It is a chemical compound it its own right with its own set of physical and chemical properties. It is an organic compound with the formula CH3OH
the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
Salt is a chemical compound. It has chemical and physical properties.
what are the chemical sediments example? An example would be salt. As seawater evaporates from a surface, what is left is salt.
it has an high melting point
No, salt will (physically) dissolve in water, without changing chemical properties
Examples of substances include water, salt, oxygen, sugar, and gold. These are all materials that have distinct chemical compositions and physical properties.
no
flammmability
Physical properties include characteristics of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing the substance's chemical composition. Examples include color, density, melting point, boiling point, and conductivity.
No, Glauber's salt and Epsom salt are not the same. Glauber's salt, also known as sodium sulfate, is a compound with the chemical formula Na2SO4. Epsom salt, on the other hand, is magnesium sulfate heptahydrate with the chemical formula MgSO4·7H2O. While both are salts, they have different chemical compositions and properties.
No, burning salt is not a characteristic property. The physical and chemical properties of salt remain the same whether it is burned or not.