Nitrogen is not combustible.
The National Fire Protection Association has assigned a flammability rating of 0 (minimal fire hazard) to nitrogen.
However, In contact with ozone, nitrogen can oxidize explosively.
If by nitro you are reffering to any of a number of oxides of nitrogen, then the answer is no.
However, the nitro- prefix is often used to describe compounds containing the -NO2 group.
Substances containing this group do tend to be explosive or flammable.
Examples include nitroglycerin, TNT (trinitrotoluene), and nitrocellulose.
No. Nitrogen is not very reactive. This is very good for us. Earth's atmosphere is mostly nitrogen. If nitrogen were flammable, oxygen would not be able to exist in the amounts we need.
Thermability
This property is flammability.
Flammability is an example of the chemical property.
Flammability is a chemical property; burning is a change.
The answer is simple: flammability involve a chemical change.
Flammability is a chemical property.
flammability is how easily something can catch fire
Flammability is a physical chemical property of materials.Flammability is a chemical property.
Thermability
The flammability of silicon is not known scientist are still figuring out that.
Flammability is a chemical property that indicates how well a substance reacts with the element oxygen. Flammability requires oxygen in air for a substance to ignite, or lead to combustion. In regards to flammable liquid, a term often used is flash point, which is the minimum temperature required by flammable liquids to give off enough vapors into the air and begin to burn at their surfaces.
Burning is a chemical change, flammability is a chemical property.
Flammability involve a chemical reaction - oxidation.
No, flammability is a chemical property.
This chemical has a very high flammability, therefore, we should avoid it.
This property is flammability.
Flammability is an example of the chemical property.