it forms a triple bond
No, they are different forms of the same element, so they are allotropes. Oxygen contains two atoms per molecule and ozone contains three atoms per molecule. Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons, such as oxygen-16 and oxygen-17.
carbon atoms forms the backbone of glucose molecule
No, the atom is the basic unit for elements. An element consists of one type of atom; iron consists of iron atoms, sulfur consists of sulfur atoms, and so on. A Molecule is a group of atoms of one or more types; carbon dioxide (CO2) is a molecule consisting of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms, water (H2O) consists of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. The molecule is the base unit for chemical compounds. A single molecule of water is still the chemical compound water, but if that molecule is split apart into its constituent parts, say through electrolysis, then it ceases to be water and becomes the two elements oxygen and hydrogen. To be thorough, it is important to note that some elements occur naturally in molecular forms. Many gasses occur in molecules consisting of pairs of the same atoms: Hydrogen (H2), Oxygen (O2), Nitrogen (N2), for example. So why isn't the hydrogen molecule the base unit for the element hydrogen? The reason is that if you split the hydrogen molecule into its constituent atoms, those atoms still remain as hydrogen.
Elements, the core building blocks of matter, are each themselves one type of atom. One atom of a substance is an element, two or more atoms forms a molecule. Some elements, like Oxygen, will naturally form into molecules. A molecule of Oxygen is made up of two atoms of the element Oxygen.
Nitrogen
Oxygen forms lots of covalent bonds, typically with carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, or chlorine, or with other oxygen atoms in the case of the diatomic oxygen molecule.
it forms a triple bond
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.
Yes, oxygen is a diatomic molecule, meaning it naturally forms O2.
Nitrogen and Oxygen being both nonmetals, they would form a covalent bond between the two.
Carbon forms 4 bonds, nitrogen forms 3, oxygen forms two and hydrogen forms one.
No, they are different forms of the same element, so they are allotropes. Oxygen contains two atoms per molecule and ozone contains three atoms per molecule. Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons, such as oxygen-16 and oxygen-17.
O3 is ozone which is an unstable atmospheric compound. It is continually being formed and decomposed but generally it forms at an equal rate of it's decomposition creating a dynamic equilibrium in our atmosphere.
Carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen itself all have this property.
A covalent bond
Gases such as helium, neon have one atom in their stable molecules, compounds such as oxygen, nitrogen, bromine have two, ozone has three, phosphorus has four and sulfur has basically eight (and it forms various crown like structures with differed numbers of atoms).
Water is made up of two different elements and three atoms their are two atoms of hydrogen and their is one atom of oxygen, which forms (makes) water or H2OH2 + O --> H2O