it will turn into water (h2o) or nitrogen oxide (h2o2)
Under normal conditions found on the Earth, nitrogen is a gas. Elsewhere in the universe, and in some earthly laboratories, nitrogen can be a liquid or a solid.
Phosphorus - to keep the oxygen in the air from oxidizing it.
the main three gases in air are nitrogen, oxygen and inert gases 78% of air is made up of nitrogen, 21% is oxygen, just under 1% is argon and the remaining part is made up of other gases such as carbon dioxide and water vapour.
Nitrogen (78%) and oyxgen (21%). Argon comprises just under 1%.
Molecular oxygen is a bit over a fifth of the Earth's atmosphere, and molecular nitrogen is a bit under four-fifths of the Earth's atmosphere. There are also small amounts of oxygen and nitrogen in other atmospheric components such as carbon dioxide and ammonia.
No. Oxygen is not active enough to displace chlorine under ordinary conditions.
Sulfuric Acid ------- No. Nitrogen can be made to react with hydrogen under special conditions to make ammonia. This is done industrially using the Haber process.
because skipp is a legend...
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.
All of them can be gases, but under standard conditions mercury is a liquid.
Because the gases together under high temperature and pressure, and are subject to sparks.
Inert means non-reactive. Inert gases do not react with fluorine and oxygen except under exceptional conditions that do not occure naturally on the Earth.
When hydrogen is attached to N, F, or O (nitrogen, fluorine, or oxygen).
Gold reacts with few elements including chlorine, oxygen and fluorine under critical conditions.
Yes: Because air contains both nitrogen and oxygen and inhaling brings air in gas phase into contact with the lungs, it is impossible to breathe under normal conditions without inhaling nitrogen.
nitrogen
Examples are: oxygen hydrogen, bromine, nitrogen, krypton, neon, argon etc.