please define what kind of stability: chemical, physical and isotopic stability are different.
assuming diatomic molecular nitrogen it is stable up to about 1000C at atmospheric pressures.
An element that needs three electrons to become stable is nitrogen. Nitrogen has five valence electrons and can gain three more electrons to achieve a full outer shell of eight electrons, making it stable.
5 valence electrons because it needs to gain 3 electrons in order to become stable
The most common stable isotopes of nitrogen are nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15. Nitrogen-14 is the most abundant, making up about 99.6% of naturally occurring nitrogen, while nitrogen-15 makes up the remaining 0.4%.
Nitrogen hydroxide does not exist as a stable compound. Nitrogen can form various oxides like nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), but no stable compound exists that can be identified as "nitrogen hydroxide."
An atom of nitrogen has 5 electrons in its outer shell. This makes nitrogen a nonmetal and means it requires 3 more electrons to fill its outer shell and become stable.
Nitrogen is sufficiently stable.
the elemental form of Nitrogen is N 2 it is because it's electronic configaration is 2,5 means it need electrons to become stable so two nitrogen atoms combine to form N 2 as to become stable
An element that needs three electrons to become stable is nitrogen. Nitrogen has five valence electrons and can gain three more electrons to achieve a full outer shell of eight electrons, making it stable.
Nitrogen has three stable isotopes. Namely they are nitrogen-14, nitrogen-15 and nitrogen-16.
In a nitrogen atom's ground state, it has five atoms. The electron will have to gain three electrons to become stable.
5 valence electrons because it needs to gain 3 electrons in order to become stable
The most common stable isotopes of nitrogen are nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15. Nitrogen-14 is the most abundant, making up about 99.6% of naturally occurring nitrogen, while nitrogen-15 makes up the remaining 0.4%.
nitrogen atoms join up to form nitrogen molecules becoz their outermost shell is not stable. to be stable, they join up to form nitrogen molecues... ;)
Nitrogen hydroxide does not exist as a stable compound. Nitrogen can form various oxides like nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), but no stable compound exists that can be identified as "nitrogen hydroxide."
An atom of nitrogen has 5 electrons in its outer shell. This makes nitrogen a nonmetal and means it requires 3 more electrons to fill its outer shell and become stable.
nitrogen-14 is stable, it does not decay.
The stable nitrogen doesn't emit any radiation.