it's a gas - it fills all available space.
A liquid will sit in a container.
The pressure inside of a container when nitrogen gas is added depends on:what the pressure was before the gas was addedhow big the container ishow much nitrogen gas is addedthe temperature of the gas before it is addedthe temperature of the container and its contents
increases
Yes, unless it is under pressure in a container. yes,gas is the normal phase of nitrogen and it is a noble gas
Nitrogen can exist as a compressed gas when placed under pressure in a container. At room temperature and normal atmospheric pressure, nitrogen is a colorless and odorless gas.
Yes, nitrogen has a definite volume in its gas phase as it fills up the container it is in. However, in its liquid or solid phase, nitrogen can take the shape of its container and does not have a definite volume.
No, nitrogen gas will not rise. Like all gases, nitrogen will expand to fill its container evenly, regardless of its density. In a gravitational field, nitrogen gas will be subject to diffusion and mixing, rather than rising on its own.
About twice the size of a 2 liter soda bottle. Liquid nitrogen is extremely cold- the container must be vacuum insulated, or the liquid nitrogen quickly turn to gas.
To calculate the number of moles of nitrogen gas in the container, you can use the ideal gas law equation: PV = nRT, where P is the pressure, V is the volume, n is the number of moles, R is the gas constant, and T is the temperature in Kelvin. Convert the pressure to atm, the volume to L, and the temperature to Kelvin. Then plug in the values and solve for n.
No. Gases do not have a definite shape as well as volume. This is applicable for every gas.
It rises, because you have packed more atoms into the same space.
You can see the movement of nitrogen dioxide gas because it is a more polar molecule and interacts with light differently. Carbon dioxide is non-polar and does not interact strongly with light to be visible.
One can obtain nitrogen gas at home by purchasing a nitrogen gas cylinder from a supplier or using a nitrogen gas generator to produce nitrogen gas from the air.