Wax will melt and is converted from solid to liquid. It is a physical change.
Only the melting is physical (can easily be reversed by cooling down) but the actual burning (flame) is a complicated chemical set of reactions.
Physical change means change physically while chemical change means change chemically or change in chemical properties.Like if you would drop a chip of zinc in sulphuric acid it will its color will be changed which is no doubt a physical change.But,also its properties are changed as it will be transformed into zinc sulphate from simple zinc,thus it also undergoes a chemical change. Now,with your question,the candle breaks but the candle remains the candle,so,its not a chemical change but a physical change only.Hope it helps!
The melting of the wax is a physical change. The burning the of wick is the chemical change
Candle wax typically reacts with oxygen in the air when it is burning, producing heat, light, and carbon dioxide. The chemical reaction that occurs during the burning of candle wax is called combustion.
Oh, dude, yes, it's totally a physical change when a candle burns and changes size. The wax is melting and then solidifying again as it cools down, so it's like a hot and cold dance party for the molecules. It's not like the candle magically grows or shrinks, it's just physics doing its thing.
Wax will melt and is converted from solid to liquid. It is a physical change.
Wax will melt and is converted from solid to liquid. It is a physical change.
Candle wax is a physical property since it is a characteristic of the substance itself. Physical properties describe the appearance, composition, and behavior of a material without changing its chemical composition.
For the wax, yes. It changes to a liquid and then back to a solid. But some of the wax is also consumed in a chemical change as it oxidizes, along with the burning wick.
It is actually both. The burning of the wick involves a chemical change. The physical change is the wax.
The wax melts, it can solidify into a solid again.
Only the melting is physical (can easily be reversed by cooling down) but the actual burning (flame) is a complicated chemical set of reactions.
The candle has a solid wax body that becomes liquid when heated. It typically has a wick at its center that is used for lighting the candle. It emits light and heat when burning. The candle eventually melts and decreases in size as it burns.
The melting of the wax is a physical change. The burning the of wick is the chemical change
Physical change means change physically while chemical change means change chemically or change in chemical properties.Like if you would drop a chip of zinc in sulphuric acid it will its color will be changed which is no doubt a physical change.But,also its properties are changed as it will be transformed into zinc sulphate from simple zinc,thus it also undergoes a chemical change. Now,with your question,the candle breaks but the candle remains the candle,so,its not a chemical change but a physical change only.Hope it helps!
Candle wax evaporates when the candle is burning because the heat from the flame causes the wax to melt and turn into a gas, which then evaporates into the air.
A burning candle involves both physical and chemical changes. The physical change is the melting of the wax, while the chemical change is the wax combining with oxygen in the air to produce heat, light, carbon dioxide, and water vapor.