It is a physical process as it is revesible. Chemist John Thanks
depending on what it is..
heat
distillation
salting out
electrolysis
It is a chemical process.
only by chemical method
chemical reactions
electrophoresis
The compound, magnesium fluoride, is used in the process of brazing. It helps to smooth out the air particles by using this chemical compound to get rid of the pollutants, which helps with preventing oxide formation.
Yes, but not physically, only chemically. Part of the definition of a compound, as opposed to a mixture or solution, is that compounds can only be separated back into their respective elements through a CHEMICAL process.
Reactivity is not a physical property because it's a characteristic of a chemical element or compound and is involved in chemical process.
The answer is a compound, though it is not really correct to say you'd separate a compound. The better term is split up.
Only a chemical reaction can separate a compound into its parts.☻
chemical reactions
chemical reaction
Iron atoms are not chemically joined with another substance in a mixture. Chemical reactions are needed to separate them in a compound.
electrophoresis
an enzyme
Decomposition of a compound is a chemical process.
Synthesising a compound is a chemical process; making a mixture is a mechanical process.
Any compound can in some way be broken down into its elemental constituents (although they may spontaneously partially or entirely recombine afterwards). One method that will always do this is thermal decomposition, or thermolysis. In this chemical process the compound is simply heated to a high enough temperature that all the chemical bonds between the atom break. Another gentler method uses the techniques of chemical analysis, plus some additional steps to separate the elements of the original compound from the elements of the carrier compounds used to separate them from the original compound.
reaction of any compound with H2O
This is a chemical process.