Physical & Chemical Changes
Physical and Chemical Changes
What you'll learn
- Define and distinguish physical and chemical changes.
- Recognize signs of a chemical change.
- Everyday examples of each type.
- Reversible vs irreversible changes.
Key concepts
Physical changes
A physical change alters the form or appearance of a substance but does NOT change its chemical composition.
Key features:
- No new substance is formed.
- Original substance can usually be recovered (reversible).
- Chemical properties remain the same.
Examples of physical changes:
| Change | Original substance | After change |
|---|---|---|
| Ice melting | Water (solid) | Water (liquid) — same H₂O |
| Water boiling | Water (liquid) | Water vapour (gas) — same H₂O |
| Tearing paper | Paper | Smaller pieces of paper |
| Dissolving salt in water | Salt (NaCl) | Salt solution — salt can be recovered by evaporation |
| Stretching a rubber band | Rubber | Stretched rubber — same material |
| Crushing a can | Aluminium | Crushed aluminium — same metal |
| Melting wax | Solid wax | Liquid wax — cools back to solid |
| Magnetising iron | Iron | Magnetised iron — can be demagnetised |
| Cutting wood | Wood | Smaller pieces of wood |
Chemical changes
A chemical change produces one or more new substances with different chemical properties.
Key features:
- New substance(s) formed.
- Usually irreversible (cannot easily get back original).
- Chemical composition changes.
- Often accompanied by observable signs.
Signs of a chemical change:
- Change in colour (e.g., apple turning brown when cut).
- Production of gas (bubbles — e.g., vinegar + baking soda → CO₂).
- Change in temperature (heat given out or absorbed).
- Formation of precipitate (insoluble solid forms in a liquid).
- Change in smell (new odour — burning, fermentation).
- Light or flame produced (burning).
Examples of chemical changes:
| Change | New substance(s) formed |
|---|---|
| Burning wood | Carbon dioxide, water, ash, smoke |
| Rusting of iron | Iron oxide (Fe₂O₃) — different colour, texture, mass |
| Digestion of food | Simpler molecules (glucose, amino acids) |
| Cooking an egg | Denatured protein — egg can't be uncooked |
| Milk turning sour | Lactic acid (curd/yoghurt) |
| Photosynthesis | Glucose and oxygen from CO₂ and water |
| Respiration | CO₂ and water from glucose and oxygen |
| Baking a cake | New compounds from flour, egg, sugar reaction |
| Neutralisation | Salt and water from acid and base |
Comparison table
| Feature | Physical change | Chemical change |
|---|---|---|
| New substance? | No | Yes |
| Reversible? | Usually yes | Usually no |
| Chemical composition | Same | Different |
| Energy change | Small | Often significant |
| Examples | Melting, dissolving, tearing | Burning, rusting, digestion |
Reversible vs irreversible
- Reversible changes: original substance can be recovered easily — most physical changes.
- Examples: melting ice → refreeze; dissolving sugar → evaporate to get sugar back.
- Irreversible changes: cannot easily recover original substance — most chemical changes.
- Examples: burning paper → cannot un-burn; cooking egg → cannot un-cook.
Note: Some chemical changes are reversible in special conditions (e.g., electrolysis of water back to hydrogen and oxygen), but they require significant energy input.
Rusting — a detailed chemical change
- Rusting: iron + oxygen + water → iron oxide (rust)
- 4Fe + 3O₂ + nH₂O → 2Fe₂O₃·nH₂O (rust)
- Rust is reddish-brown; flakes off; weakens iron.
- Prevention: painting, greasing/oiling, galvanisation (coating with zinc), using stainless steel.
Crystallisation
- Crystallisation: a physical process by which dissolved substance forms crystals as solution cools or evaporates.
- Used to: purify substances, grow large crystals of alum/salt/copper sulphate.
- New substance: NOT formed (same compound, different form) → physical change.
Quick check
- Define physical change. Give three examples.
- Define chemical change. List three signs that a chemical change has occurred.
- Is dissolving salt in water a physical or chemical change? Explain.
- Is burning wood reversible? Why or why not?
- How can you prevent iron from rusting? Name two methods.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Physical and Chemical Changes.
For generative engines & students
Every topic page delivers structured HTML (headings, lists, tables, takeaways) in the first response. Perfect for citations in AI overviews and fast scanning by students and parents.
