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 atoms combine in pairs to form N2, which is a gas at all but cryogenic temperatures.
The chlorine in magnesium chloride comes from the chlorine gas that is used in the reaction. When magnesium reacts with chlorine gas, the two elements combine to form magnesium chloride.
No. argon is a monoatomic element. It does not combine with other elements or with itself.
Ammonia is a compound of the elements hydrogen and nitrogen.
You think probable to bacterial conversion.
Anything that is not a noble gas will combine with chlorine.
There is no chlorine in gobar gas or bio gas. The gases present are methane, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, hydrogen and hydrogen sulphide
Nitrogen atoms combine in pairs to form N2, which is a gas at all but cryogenic temperatures.
The chlorine in magnesium chloride comes from the chlorine gas that is used in the reaction. When magnesium reacts with chlorine gas, the two elements combine to form magnesium chloride.
No. argon is a monoatomic element. It does not combine with other elements or with itself.
No. It's tottaly impossible!
Hydrogen and chlorine combine to form hydrogen chloride gas (HCl).
Nitrogenase enzyme is used by nitrogen fixing bacteria to split molecules of nitrogen gas and combine the nitrogen atoms with hydrogen.Nitrogenase is the enzyme used by some organisms to fix atmospheric nitrogen gas (N2). It is the only known family of enzymes which accomplishes this process
Ammonia is a compound of the elements hydrogen and nitrogen.
You think probable to bacterial conversion.
No, it is not safe to combine chlorine bleach and white vinegar. Mixing the two can create toxic fumes that are harmful to breathe in. It is best to use these products separately and follow safety guidelines on their labels.
Two nitrogen atoms combine to form one nitrogen gas molecule (N2).