You get it every time you take a breath even though you don't need it to survive.
sometimes when they pollution is in the air
In a biological sense, Nitrogen gas can only be taken out of the air by bacteria, specifically Nitrogen fixing bacteria.
They convert N2, Gaseous Nitrogen, into Ammonia, NH3
atmospheric fixation by lightning
biological fixation by certain microbes - alone or in a symbiotic relationship with some plants and animals
industrial fixation
we can do by fractional liquefaction, we can separate various gasses from air by the temperature they liquify.
Nitrogen is obtained by distillation of liquid air.
Dry air is just over 78% nitrogen gas.
Nitrogen gas is found in the air. It is the most abundant gas there, comprising about 4/5 of the air.
Air contains approximately 78% nitrogen gas.
At reasonable temperature nitrogen is a gas. Most of the air is nitrogen.
Nitrogen is a GAS, the main component of air.
Nitrogen gas is fairly inert and so is difficult for organisms to process. Instead, animals must get usable nitrogen compounds from their food.
Either ammonium nitrite or ammonium dichromate can he heated to obtain nitrogen gas.
If by 'our gas' you mean air, then roughly 78% of air is Nitrogen.
Dry air is just over 78% nitrogen gas.
This gas is nitrogen (78,08 %) in air.
Nitrogen Gas
Nitrogen, you can't survive on it obviously but you breath it in every day it is the most abundant gas in the atmosphere followed by oxygen I think.
Rhizobium Bacillus is the bacteria that converts nitrogen gas in the air into ammonia. It plays an important role the nitrogen cycle by fixing nitrogen which is otherwise an inert gas.
Nitrogen gas is found in the air. It is the most abundant gas there, comprising about 4/5 of the air.
Nitrogen is a gas that can be compressed. Not all nitrogen is compressed, for example the nitrogen in the air we breath is at atmospheric pressure.
Nitrogen is an element and the gas is diatomic in other words the gas in the air is made of two atoms of nitrogen.
Nitrogen is a gas that can be compressed. Not all nitrogen is compressed, for example the nitrogen in the air we breath is at atmospheric pressure.