It depends on how you bend the wood. For example, if you steam it, it is reversible. But if you cut notches, it is not reversible.
Reversible.
No, converting wood into sawdust is an irreversible change because the physical structure of the wood is permanently altered during the process. Once wood is broken down into sawdust, it cannot be easily converted back into its original form.
This is a reversible process.
You think probable to a reversible reaction.
Melting ice cubes to form water is an example of a physical change that is not reversible. Once the ice cubes have melted into water, it is not possible to reverse the process and turn the water back into ice cubes without additional processes like freezing.
It depends on how you bend the wood. For example, if you steam it, it is reversible. But if you cut notches, it is not reversible.
Reversible.
Coffee dissolving, water boiling and chocolate melting are reversible physical transformations whereas wood burning is a chemical combustive transformation.
if you chop down a tree and cut it into a bunch of little peices... can you put that tree back together so that it can continue on living its boring tree life? the answer is no it is irreversible
Unfortunately, it is not a physical/reversible change, as combustion causes chemicals to change their bonding. A simpler example than wood would be glucose (the same reaction as in respiration): C6H12O6 + 6O2 --> 6CO2 + 6H2O This reaction is not reversible.
Yes, it's the equivalent of chopping wood in half, which is also a physical change. Unlike chopping wood in half, this change is completely reversible.
No, converting wood into sawdust is an irreversible change because the physical structure of the wood is permanently altered during the process. Once wood is broken down into sawdust, it cannot be easily converted back into its original form.
Yes, this change is reversible.
This is a reversible process.
You think probable to a reversible reaction.
Chemical changes create new substances and cannot be reversed.Burning paperLighting a matchMixing sugar and waterPhysical changes do not create new substances and can be reversed.Crushing a canTearing paperChopping wood
reversible