0.01% of carbon monoxide is present on inert gas
Carbon monoxide is not an inert gas.
carbon monoxide is readily oxidized to carbon dioxide and and aluminium oxide coats al forming an inert layer preventing further reaction.
catalyitic converters reduce pollution by converting carbon monoxide into carbon dioxide which is a less harmful gas
Nitrogen gas is nearly an inert gas. Hemoglobin is optimized for bonding with oxygen, but bonds even better to carbon monoxide (which makes carbon monoxide such an effective poison).
NO.
Carbon is an active element in Group 14. There are only a handful of elements that are inert, and they are located in Group 18.
Carbon is a non metalic solid.
Covalent Bond. Chemically Active. The only elements that are inert are group 18, or 8A.
Argon is chemically inert. It doesn't react with carbon.
Nine gases in the air. Nitrogen (78%) Oxygen (21%) Argon (0.9%) Carbon dioxide (0.03%) The remaining (0.07%) varying amounts of water vapour, hydrogen, methane, ozone, carbon monoxide. Also some feeble traces of inert gasses helium, neon, krypton and xenon.
Graphite is considered to be the most stable form.
Depending to the acid concentration but I'd suppose that it is rather inert to acid.