Nitrogen is an unreactive gas, easy to obtain and at reasonable cost.
It is not used as an inert gas, but in lieu of an inert gas, of which there are only 6, it is sufficient and cost effective.
an inert gas has no polarity and the liquids you are examining have a polarity. the liquids you are examining are boiled and then propelled through a polar medium. so the liquid is separated based on boiling point and polarity. The inert gas wont be collected because its a gas at room temperature
Nitrogen gas is cheaper than other "inert" gasses. Nitrogen is "more inert" or less reactive than most gasses, and it is cheap.
inert gases are used because they provide inert atmosphere i.e they do not react with the sample in the column.
ankur solanki
The strength of the nitrogen-nitrogen triple bond makes the N2 molecule very unreactive. N2 is so inert that lithium is one of the few elements with which it reacts at room temperature.
Due to its high bond ionisation enthalpy, the N2 molecule is difficult to break in the moderately extreme conditions, so it acts like an inert gas.
fuel cell
'Tisn't
In the atmosphere nitrogen takes the form of the diatomic nitrogen molecule, N2.
no oxygen is not a inert gas
mercury is an inert gas having 8 valence electrons
N2
The atmosphere is primarily composed of Nitrogen (N2), which accounts for 78%. Oxygen follows, accounting for 20% of its volume, with argon less than 1%. The remainder is composed of particulates and trace gases, including water vapor.
Nitrogen, N2, (about 79% in air) is a rather inert gas.
Gold is an inert metal, Helium, Argon, and the other nobel gases are inert. Nitrogen gas (N2) is considered inert for most purposes, though nitrogen is found in a lot of compound.
Six noble gases (group 18), and Nitrogen (N2) gas are all inert. They are all different elements, so: 7
inert gas inert gas inert gas
Yes, inert gases are part of the peiodic table. List of Inert Gases Helium (He) Neon (Ne) Argon (Ar) Krypton (Kr) Xenon (Xe) Radon (Rn) Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) Nitrogen (N2)
Nitrogen gas(N2) which contains 78% of atmosphere and Oxygen gas(O2) which contains 21% of atmosphere and the remaining portion is Carbon(iv)oxide and inert gas.
argon is an inert gas
Firstly, N2 is treated sometimes as an inert gas as it is used to create an inert atmosphere so that no reactions take place. But nitrogen has many compounds as it is more chemically reactive than helium or any other inert gases. Its compounds: e.g. Ammonia, Nitric Acid etc. More on: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogen
All argon gas is inert.
In the atmosphere nitrogen takes the form of the diatomic nitrogen molecule, N2.
That depends on what inert gas you're taling about.
no oxygen is not a inert gas