A strong enough external force or energy can break a nitrogen bond.
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.
A Nitrogen molecule(N2) has a triple bond between it Nitrogen will only react only if the bond is broken. And since Chlorine cannot break this triple bond, under normal conditions, it does not react with nitrogen readily.
Nitrogen is less reactive at room temperature because of its triple bond which is very strong and requires a significant amount of energy to break. It is also a relatively stable molecule due to its full valence shell of electrons, making it unreactive under normal conditions.
Nitrogen is non-reactive because it has a very stable triple bond between its two nitrogen atoms in the N2 molecule. This triple bond requires a lot of energy to break, making nitrogen resistant to most chemical reactions.
Diatomic nitrogen (N2) is unreactive because it has a very strong triple bond between the two nitrogen atoms, making it difficult for other substances to break apart or react with the molecule. This stability is due to the high bond energy and low reactivity of the N2 molecule.
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.
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.
A Nitrogen molecule(N2) has a triple bond between it Nitrogen will only react only if the bond is broken. And since Chlorine cannot break this triple bond, under normal conditions, it does not react with nitrogen readily.
Nitrogen is less reactive at room temperature because of its triple bond which is very strong and requires a significant amount of energy to break. It is also a relatively stable molecule due to its full valence shell of electrons, making it unreactive under normal conditions.
Nitrogen is not a bond; it is the single element Nitrogen.
Nitrogen is non-reactive because it has a very stable triple bond between its two nitrogen atoms in the N2 molecule. This triple bond requires a lot of energy to break, making nitrogen resistant to most chemical reactions.
Diatomic nitrogen (N2) is unreactive because it has a very strong triple bond between the two nitrogen atoms, making it difficult for other substances to break apart or react with the molecule. This stability is due to the high bond energy and low reactivity of the N2 molecule.
form a stable nitrogen molecule with a triple bond between them, resulting in a molecule of N2. This triple bond is very strong and difficult to break, which is why nitrogen gas (N2) is relatively inert and does not react easily with other elements.
This bond is covalent.
A nitrogen molecule forms from two nitrogen atoms, where a triple bond is shared between the atoms. This bond is a very strong and stable covalent bond known as a nitrogen-nitrogen triple bond.
Yes, nitrogen and sulfur can form a covalent bond because they are both nonmetals which tend to share electrons to fill their valence shells. Nitrogen can form multiple bonds with sulfur, such as in compounds like nitrogen dioxide or sulfur hexafluoride.
Although the bond holding the nitrogen atoms together is difficult to break, some types of bacterium are able to break the triple covalent bond of N2 gas. The bacteria bind nitrogen atoms to hydrogen creating "fixed" nitrogen, ammonia (NH3) in a process called Nitrogen Fixation. Oxygen ruins this process, so considering our bodies are roughly 65% oxygen, we can't do it.