Nitrogen in its elemental form is covalently bonded.
A free element cannot be ionically bonded.
Ammonia (NH3) consists of the nonmetals nitrogen and hydrogen, so it is a covalent compound.
If its a metal and gas then its ionicly bonded, if gas and gas then covalent.
Urea is not ionic but a more polar covalent compound
Urea is covalent.
Its Ionic :)
It is covalent.
it is organic
Covalent
Energy is NOT a compound.
it is an organic salt but shows some properties of inorganic compound as solubility in water.
Water is classed as inorganic. Organic compounds have carbon in them.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is definitely an inorganic compound. NB Organic compounds are the chemistry of CARBON compounds. Inorganic compounds is any other compound NOT containing carbon.
Concrete is an inorganic mixture, of inorganic compounds.
Urea
Urea is organic regardless of how it is produced. Its chemical formula is: CO(NH2)2https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urea#Chemical_industry
It is organic however it is produced. That is because it is a carbon compound.
Organic
it is organic
No. Ammonia and urea are distinct chemical compounds, as are their nitrates.
It is possible to consider Friedrich Wöhler, a German chemist which produced in 1828 the organic compound urea from inorganic substances.
Do you mean how is an organic compound different from an inorganic compound? If so, an organic compound has carbon, an inorganic compound does not need to have carbon.
NH4 is not a compound. It is an organic part of a compound which could be organic or inorganic.
Energy is NOT a compound.
Organic compound
Ammonia contains n and h. So ammonia is a inorganic compound.