sugar solution
Yes, it is a physical change. The sugar seems to "disappear" in the water, but if you taste the water you will also taste the sugar. So, the basic chemical nature of both sugar and water is unchanged. That is a characteristic of a physical change.
Before mixing you have, of course, separately sugar, water and drink mix.
They dissolve. The sugar molecules are still there, they just cease to form sugar crystals, when they mix with water. You don't see them, but you can still taste them. Yummm!
No, mixing salt with water does not create a new substance. The salt dissolves in the water but the chemical makeup of both substances remains the same. This is a physical change, not a chemical change.
When sugar and drink mix are added to water, they dissolve and mix with the molecules of water. The sugar molecules break apart and are evenly distributed throughout the water, creating a sweetened solution. Similarly, the drink mix particles dissolve into the water, creating a flavored solution.
No, dissolving sugar in water is a physical property because it does not change the chemical composition of either the sugar or the water. The process involves breaking the intermolecular forces between sugar molecules, allowing them to mix with water molecules.
When sugar dissolves in water, it forms a homogeneous solution, with sugar molecules (sucrose) dispersed throughout the water molecules. The process is a physical change, not a chemical reaction, and involves the breaking of intermolecular forces between the sugar molecules, allowing them to mix with the water molecules.
Yes, it is a physical change. The sugar seems to "disappear" in the water, but if you taste the water you will also taste the sugar. So, the basic chemical nature of both sugar and water is unchanged. That is a characteristic of a physical change.
There is no chemical reaction. Most sugars are soluble in water, so the sugar will probably dissolve; dissolved sugars tend to form hemiacetals or hemiketals if they're not already in that configuration.
Yes. Sugar is soluble in water.
The process of sugar dissolving in water is a physical change because no new substances are formed. The sugar molecules simply mix with the water molecules to create a homogeneous solution.
Before mixing you have, of course, separately sugar, water and drink mix.
No, the sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent.
They dissolve. The sugar molecules are still there, they just cease to form sugar crystals, when they mix with water. You don't see them, but you can still taste them. Yummm!
They both will melt and become sugared water
You have made sweet water. It is a mixture of sugar and water. It can be separated back into sugar and water by evaporating the water, since there is no chemical change. Add a teabag and make sweet tea.
sooner of later the sugar would break down