Elemental nitrogen has 7 electrons.
Thus, the first (or K) shell of electrons contains 2 of them (the maximum that the K shell can accommodate).
The second (or L) shell of electrons contains the remaining 5, however, the maximum number of electrons that the L shell can accommodate is 8.
Therefore, elemental nitrogen has three unpaired electrons that can be used to form covalent bonds.
In ammonia (NH3) all three of those unpaired electrons are paired with hydrogen atoms.
Leaving only a single unshared pair of electrons in the L shell.
Technically, the pair of electrons in the K shell are also an "unshared" pair but they are unavailable for covalent activity so are generally not considered as such.
3, it fills the 1s orbital and the 2s. But only has 3 in the 2p, which means there is one electron in each sublevel, so there are three unpaired pairs.
3. It completely fills the 1s and 2s orbitals. But only has 3 in the 2p orbital, which means there is one electron in each sublevel, so there are three unpaired electrons.
Three pair. ( six electrons ) One sigma bond and two pi bonds.
In a molecule of nitrogen three pairs of electrons are shared by two nitrogen atoms
the answer is THREE :)
Three pairs of electrons in a molecule of nitrogen.
it has 3 unshared
one
Nitrogen does not lose or gain electrons. It is a diatomic molecule (N2) and is a molecular compound which has covalent bonding. In other words, the molecule has a triple bond, in which 6 electrons are shared, three for each atom.
N2 is a molecules of an element because both atoms in the molecule have the same number of protons (7). A lone nitrogen atom is somewhat unstable as it needs 3 more valence electrons for a full outer shell. To fill this shell it shares electrons with another nitrogen atom.
There are 22 electrons in one molecule of CO2.
5
Gaining electrons lead to decrease in oxidation state.
Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons
The Nitrogen Atom possesses seven protons in its nucleus; therefore the electrically neutral atom of Nitrogen has seven electrons in orbit about it.
there are 5 bonding electrons. It depends on the number of valence electrons.
There are three bonds between Nitrogen and hydrogen and there are thus 3 shared bonding pairs of electrons. in addition since Nitrogen is 1s22s22p3 there are also the none bonding 1s2 electrons and the 2s2 electrons making 5 total shared pairs of electrons.
Nitrogen does not lose or gain electrons. It is a diatomic molecule (N2) and is a molecular compound which has covalent bonding. In other words, the molecule has a triple bond, in which 6 electrons are shared, three for each atom.
Nitrogen is found in a number of molecules but perhaps most famously it is found in the DNA molecule.
N2 is a molecules of an element because both atoms in the molecule have the same number of protons (7). A lone nitrogen atom is somewhat unstable as it needs 3 more valence electrons for a full outer shell. To fill this shell it shares electrons with another nitrogen atom.
There are 22 electrons in one molecule of CO2.
The atomic number of nitrogen is 7. That means that nitrogen has 7 protons per atom, each one having a +1 charge. Assuming that the atom of nitrogen is electrically neutral, there must also be 7 electrons, each of them having a -1 charge, in order for the total charge of the atom to be 0.
5
Covalent bonds do not "make up" anything; they merely hold the atoms that carry the mass of the substance together. If the questioner means, "How many covalent bonds are in a nitrogen molecule with formula N2" the answer is "one triple covalent bond."
Five Found on Wiki Answers What is the number of valence electrons in a nitrogen atom?