zero for each nitrogen
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∙ 10y agoIt is zero since it is a free element and it does not react with anything
Nitrogen has an oxidation number of -3. Since it is in group 15, it has 5 valence electrons. It wants to have eight, so it will gain three electrons. Electrons are negative, that's why the oxidation number is negative.
The oxidation state (or number) is zero. This is true for any element in any of its allotropic elemental forms.
0 in N2
0 in N2
It is zero since it is a free element and it does not react with anything
Nitrogen has an oxidation number of -3. Since it is in group 15, it has 5 valence electrons. It wants to have eight, so it will gain three electrons. Electrons are negative, that's why the oxidation number is negative.
The oxidation state (or number) is zero. This is true for any element in any of its allotropic elemental forms.
0 in N2
0 in N2
the oxidation number of nitrogen is 5
It reacts with it. The reaction is a redx reaction. Nitrogen is reduced (its oxidation number goes from 0 to -3) and hydrogen is oxidised (its oxidation number goes from 0 to +1)
The number of atoms of nitrogen of 0,755 mol of N2 is 4,546716347035.10e23.
Zero
Oxidation numbers are defined for atoms, not molecules such as N2. The oxidation number of both atoms in a divalent elemental molecule is specified to be 0, as is the oxidation number of an atom of an element for which one atom constitutes a molecular unit.
NO2 is a acidic gas. Nitrogen shows +4 oxidation number.
Just one...... Nitrogen: N2