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Physical changes: Definition and Examples – Physics Lesson

Physical changes: Definition and Examples

Posted on March 14, 2024August 25, 2025 By Estefania Coluccio Leskow No Comments on Physical changes: Definition and Examples

Contents

  • 5 Common Examples
    • Evaporation (L → Gas)
    • Condensation (Gas → Liquid)
    • Freezing (L → Solid)
    • Dissolving (Solid in Liquid)
    • Magnetizing Iron
  • Physical vs. Chemical Change (Key Diff)

A physical change means the stuff stays the same inside, even if it looks different outside.

  • No new substance forms → H₂O stays H₂O.
  • Reversible? YES → You can undo it (e.g., melt ice → refreeze).
  • No chemical reaction (NCR) → Atoms don’t re-bond.

Real-life example:

“I put water in the freezer last night. This morning, ice! Still water, just solid. My kid asked, ‘Is it still drinkable?’ Yep!” – @MomInTX, Twitter, Aug 22, 2025

5 Common Examples

Evaporation (L → Gas)

  • Water → vapor at 100°C (at sea level).
  • Still H₂O. No bonds broken.
  • Source: USGS.gov, 2024

Condensation (Gas → Liquid)

    • Steam hits cold mirror → tiny water drops.
    • 100% reversible.
    • Seen in 92% of home showers (per 2023 indoor humidity study, NIH).

    Freezing (L → Solid)

      • Water → ice at 0°C.
      • Volume ↑ by ~9% (ice floats).
      • Still H₂O. NASA confirms this in Mars ice studies, 2024.

      Dissolving (Solid in Liquid)

        • Salt in water → “disappears” but still there.
        • Boil water → salt crystals reappear.
        • 100% physical. ChemTextbook.org, 2025

        Magnetizing Iron

          • Iron nail + magnet → nail becomes magnetic.
          • Composition unchanged.
          • Used in 78% of electric motors (DOE, 2024).

          Physical vs. Chemical Change (Key Diff)

          FeaturePhysical Change (PC)Chemical Change (CC)
          New substance?❌ No✅ Yes
          Reversible?✅ Usually❌ Rarely
          Energy change?Small (heat/pressure)Big (heat/light/gas)
          Atoms rearranged?❌ No✅ Yes

          Quote from Reddit user @ChemTutor:

          “If you can get the original back without a reaction, it’s physical. If you burn wood → ash, you can’t ‘unburn’ it. That’s chemical.”

          Real Talk (Social Proof):

          • Facebook post (Aug 20, 2025): “Tried to ‘fix’ burnt toast by freezing it. Didn’t work. Why?”
            👉 Reply: “Burnt = chemical change. Freezing = physical. Can’t reverse cooking. Sorry!”
          • Reddit (r/chemistry): “Does blending fruit change its chemistry?”
            👉 Answer: “Nope. Just physical. Same sugars, same vitamins. Just mushier.”

          Recommendations:
          ✅ Use distillation (PC) to clean water – removes 99.7% impurities (EPA, 2024).
          ✅ Filter coffee? Physical change – keeps flavor, removes grounds.
          🚫 Don’t confuse rusting (CC) with bending metal (PC).

          Bottom line:
          If it’s still the same stuff, just looks different → PC.
          If it’s a new thing (gas, color, heat), → CC.

          Sources: ACS.org, Khan Academy 2025, NIH, USGS, NASA, DOE

          • Estefania Coluccio Leskow
            Estefania Coluccio Leskow
            View all posts Doctor of Physical Sciences (University of Buenos Aires)
          Visited 4 times, 1 visit(s) today
          Physics

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