Nitrogen can be obtained as a solid at very low temperature, under -210 0C.
At room temperature nitrogen is a gas.
Solid nitrogen is called "nitrogen ice" or "nitrogen snow".
Yes, nitrogen can form a molecular solid at low temperatures where the nitrogen molecules are arranged in a regular lattice structure. This solid nitrogen is known as nitrogen ice.
The volume of a liquid is typically smaller than that of the corresponding solid because the molecules are more tightly packed in the solid phase due to the stronger intermolecular forces. In the case of nitrogen, the volume of liquid nitrogen is smaller than that of solid nitrogen because the molecules in liquid nitrogen are more closely packed than in solid nitrogen.
Nitrogen gas can be converted to a solid form through a process called nitrogen liquefaction and then further cooling it to form solid nitrogen. This involves compressing and cooling the gas to very low temperatures below its boiling point of -196 degrees Celsius. At such low temperatures, nitrogen gas transforms into a solid state known as nitrogen snow or solid nitrogen.
Yes, there is.
liquid nitrogen is probably a fluid.
Nitrogen can be converted to a solid by decreasing its temperature below its melting point of 63K (-210°C). At this temperature, nitrogen transitions from a gas to a solid, forming a crystalline structure.
yes
At 0 degrees Celsius or 273 Kelvin, nitrogen is a gas. Nitrogen freezes into a solid at a much lower temperature of -210 degrees Celsius or 63 Kelvin.
Nitrogen (N) is monotonic but nitrogen gas (N2) is molecular.
Liquid nitrogen has no melting point. A melting point is the temperature when a solid turns into a liquid. Since liquid nitrogen is already a liquid, it has no melting point. It is already melted, compared to solid nitrogen.
Nitrogen primarily exists in a gaseous state at room temperature and pressure. However, under extreme conditions of low temperature and high pressure, it can form a solid called nitrogen ice, which has properties different from regular nitrogen gas.