4
Covalent because it has Tri as a prefix and it shares electrons.
Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms.
Covalent bonds do not "make up" anything; they merely hold the atoms that carry the mass of the substance together. If the questioner means, "How many covalent bonds are in a nitrogen molecule with formula N2" the answer is "one triple covalent bond."
Carbon will form four covalent bonds, nitrogen will form three covalent bonds, oxygen will form two covalent bonds, and hydrogen will form one covalent bond. Click on the related link to see a diagram showing the structure of an amino acid.
Nitrogen can form 3 covalent bonds. Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons. If nitrogen is to remain neutral complete the following equation number of valence = number of non-bonding electrons + (1/2) bonded electrons 5 = 2 + (1/2) 6
The nitrogen atom forms 3 covalent bonds.
3 covalent bonds (as in ammonia).
Covalent because it has Tri as a prefix and it shares electrons.
three
Nitrogen can form covalent bonds.
Nitric acid, HNO3 has covalent bonds. Two nitrogen-oxygen single bonds, one nitrogen-oxygen double bond and an oxygen-hydrogen single bond. There is a formal +1 charge on the nitrogen center, and a formal -1 charge on the single-bonded oxygen without the hydrogen atom.
1
3 covalent bonds can be formed by Nitrogen
Hydrogen bonds and covalent bonds are two completely different things. Covalent bonds share an electron, while hydrogen bonds (just for water molecules) act like magnets- the Oxygen atom has a slight negative charge and it "attracts" the Hydrogen atoms, which have a slight positive charge.
Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms.
Yes, nitrogen can form three covalent bonds. It has five valence electrons, three of which are unpaired. The three unpaired electrons can form covalent bonds.
Nitrogen can form single, double, and triple covalent bonds.