Gasoline has various chemical properties (particularly, it burns very well) and its combustion products have other chemical properties (they don't burn as well) but it would not be correct to say that gasoline in any sense BECOMES a chemical property. Chemicals have properties, they don't become properties.
c.strong odor
invisible
No, it is a physical change. The water and gasoline retain their chemical and physical properties.
Properties of Compounds A compound has unique properties that are distinct from the properties of its elemental constituents.
The color of gasoline, being a clear pink solution, is a physical property because it does not involve a change in the chemical composition of the substance. Physical properties are characteristics that can be observed without changing the fundamental composition of the material.
Gasoline vapor reacts explosively with the oxygen in air if ignited.
Gasoline has various chemical properties (particularly, it burns very well) and its combustion products have other chemical properties (they don't burn as well) but it would not be correct to say that gasoline in any sense BECOMES a chemical property. Chemicals have properties, they don't become properties.
Examples of the characteristics of matter: state of matter, density, radioactivity, thermal properties, electrical properties, optical properties, chemical composition, etc.
c.strong odor
characteristics or chemical and physical properties
yes ;]
Attributes
invisible
No, it is a physical change. The water and gasoline retain their chemical and physical properties.
Properties of Compounds A compound has unique properties that are distinct from the properties of its elemental constituents.
Yes, gasoline is soluble in benzene. Both gasoline and benzene are hydrocarbons, so they can mix together to form a solution. Benzene is often used as a solvent for gasoline to help improve its combustion properties.