The special compound containing both nitrogen and oxygen is known as 'nitrates'.
Nitrogen dioxide is formed as a product of combustion; oxidation (reaction with oxygen) of organic compounds from fuel containing nitrogen.
Air is a molecular compound, containing large quantities of nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide.
carbohydrates
No: Rusting occurs by the combination of ferrous metals with oxygen from air or water, and nitrogen can not form the same compounds as oxygen does.
Nitrogen and oxygen are the two most abundant gases in the air. They are actually elements and not compounds. The two most abundant compounds would be water vapor and carbon dioxide.
The cycle containing Nitrogen, sulphur, oxygen or phosphorus are known as Hetero-cyclic compounds, only for nitrogen you may say 'Azo cyclic compounds'
Dalton pictured compounds as collections of atoms. For example, nitrogen and oxygen might form a compound containing one atom of nitrogen and one atom of oxygen (written NO), a compound containing two atoms of nitrogen and one atom of oxygen (written N2O), or a compound containing one atom of nitrogen and two atoms of oxygen (written NO2)
Nitrogen dioxide is formed as a product of combustion; oxidation (reaction with oxygen) of organic compounds from fuel containing nitrogen.
Air is a molecular compound, containing large quantities of nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide.
Nitrogen oxide can refer to a binary compound of oxygen and nitrogen, or a mixture of such compounds.
Nitrogen oxide can refer to a binary compound of oxygen and nitrogen, or a mixture of such compounds.
yes
carbohydrates
a radical is a free electron, therefore it cannot be nitrogen or oxygen, its just an electron
carbon dioxide
Water, quartz, rust, and sugar are all common, important compounds containing oxygen.
Oxygen is found in literally millions of compounds, in both organic and inorganic chemistry.