The length of nitrogen-to-nitrogen bond is approx. 100 pm.
Nitrogen is a diatomic gas at room temperature. These nitrogen atoms are bond by a triple bond. It needs more energy to break this bond. So nitrogen is less reactive.
Nitrogen trichloride is a covalent compound.
A triple covalent bond.
Yes
Because the double bond between nitrogen is very strong
Nitrogen and sulfur can form a covalent bond with up to four bonds. This creates a strong bond between the two atoms which can be difficult to break.
The reason why nitrogen gas is inert at room temperature is because the triple bond between the two nitrogen atoms in each nitrogen molecule (N2) is very strong, and therefore it takes a lot of energy to break that bond, and until that bond is broken, the nitrogen cannot react with any other chemical.
Nitrogen is not a bond; it is the single element Nitrogen.
This bond is covalent.
The length of nitrogen-to-nitrogen bond is approx. 100 pm.
Hydrogen bond is not so strong; it is a bond between hydrogen and a very electronegative atom as nitrogen, fluorine, oxygen.
The question makes no sense. There's no such thing as a "nitrogen bond". If you mean "nitrogen atoms", then there are no hydrogen bonds between nitrogen atoms. If you mean "hydrogen bonds between a hydrogen and a nitrogen", then they break like any other hydrogen bond; they aren't really "bonds", just relatively strong electrostatic forces.
triple bond between the nitrogen atoms
Nitrogen is a diatomic gas at room temperature. These nitrogen atoms are bond by a triple bond. It needs more energy to break this bond. So nitrogen is less reactive.
Covalent bond
Nitrogen bases bond by the help of covalent or hydrogen bonds