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The most common one is molecular nitrogen, with formula N2.
yes nitrogen being a non metal form covalent bond
A covalent bond is one in which atoms within a molecule share pairs of electrons (hence the term covalent or "mutual electron state"). It is not clear to me what is meant by "molecular" in your question, but the bond is intramolecular(or inside the molecule). A covalent bond is a type of molecular bond, if that is the question.
Carbon dioxide is a molecular covalent bond, as no metals are present in the gas.
All halogen molecules (F2, Cl2, Br2, I2) are bonded with a single covalent bond, this bond is not ionic but molecular.ionic molecules (do not exist) are joined. this is because when a diatomic molecule it transforms to a ionic molecule when its joined by a single covalent bond.
Nitrogen is not a bond; it is the single element Nitrogen.
Nitrogen trichloride is a covalent compound.
The most common one is molecular nitrogen, with formula N2.
covalent
nitrogen
Nitrogen is both an element and a molecule. In molecular form, Nitrogen forms a binary molecule N2 with a triple bond between the two Nitrogen atoms.
This bond is covalent.
First, a coordinate bond IS a covalent bond, but one in which both electrons are provided by one element. In nitrogen monoxide (NO), there is a double bond between N and O, such as in N=O and each element contributes 2 electrons to this, so it would be considered a coordinate bond.
Nitrogen in N2 as there is a triple bond between two nitrogens.
Mostly Nitrogen (having three simple covalent bonds) uses its lone pair of electrons to form the 4th covalent bond (actually coordinate covalent or dative bond).
Covalent bond
yes nitrogen being a non metal form covalent bond