Everything about Nitrogen totally explained
Nitrogen is a
chemical element that has the symbol
N and
atomic number 7 and
atomic weight 14.0067. Elemental nitrogen is a colorless, odorless, tasteless and mostly
inert diatomic gas at
standard conditions, constituting 78.08% by volume of
Earth's atmosphere.
Many industrially important compounds, such as
ammonia,
nitric acid, organic nitrates (
propellants and
explosives), and
cyanides, contain nitrogen. The very strong bond in elemental nitrogen dominates nitrogen chemistry, causing difficulty for both organisms and industry in converting the into useful compounds, and releasing large amounts of energy when these compounds burn or decay back into nitrogen gas.
The element nitrogen was discovered by
Daniel Rutherford. Nitrogen occurs in all living organisms — it's a constituent element of
amino acids and thus of
proteins, and of
nucleic acids (
DNA and
RNA); resides in the
chemical structure of almost all
neurotransmitters; and is a defining component of
alkaloids, biological molecules produced by many organisms.
Properties
Nitrogen is a
nonmetal, with an
electronegativity of 3.0. It has five
electrons in its outer shell and is therefore
trivalent in most compounds. The triple bond in molecular nitrogen is one of the strongest in nature. The resulting difficulty of converting into other compounds, and the ease (and associated high energy release) of converting nitrogen compounds into elemental, have dominated the role of nitrogen in both nature and human economic activities.
At
atmospheric pressure molecular nitrogen
condenses (
liquifies) at 77
K (−195.8 °
C) and
freezes at 63 K (−210.0 °C) into the beta
hexagonal close-packed crystal
allotropic form. Below 35.4 K (−237.6 °C) nitrogen assumes the alpha
cubic crystal allotropic form.
Liquid nitrogen, a fluid resembling water, but with 80.8% of the density, is a common
cryogen.
Unstable allotropes of nitrogen consisting of more than two nitrogen atoms have been produced in the laboratory, like and [[tetranitrogen|]]. Under extremely high pressures (1.1 million atm) and high temperatures (2000 K), as produced under
diamond anvil conditions, nitrogen polymerizes into the single bonded
diamond crystal structure, an allotrope nicknamed "nitrogen diamond."
Occurrence
Nitrogen is the largest single constituent of the
Earth's atmosphere (78.082% by volume of dry air, 75.3% by weight in dry air). It is created by
fusion processes in
stars, and is estimated to be the 7th most abundant
chemical element by mass in the universe.
Molecular nitrogen and nitrogen
compounds have been detected in
interstellar space by astronomers using the
Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer. Molecular nitrogen is a major constituent of the
Saturnian moon
Titan's thick atmosphere, and occurs in trace amounts in other planetary atmospheres.
Nitrogen is present in all living organisms in proteins, nucleic acids and other molecules. It typically makes up around 4% of the dry weight of plant matter, and around 3% of the weight of the human body. It is a large component of animal waste (for example,
guano), usually in the form of
urea,
uric acid,
ammonium compounds and derivatives of these nitrogenous products, which are essential nutrients for all plants that are unable to
fix atmospheric nitrogen.
Nitrogen occurs naturally in a number of minerals, such as
saltpetre (potassium nitrate),
Chile saltpetre (sodium nitrate) and
sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride). Most of these are relatively uncommon, partly because of the minerals' ready solubility in water. See also and .
Isotopes
There are two stable
isotopes of nitrogen:
14N and
15N. By far the most common is
14N (99.634%), which is produced in the
CNO cycle in
stars. Of the ten isotopes produced synthetically,
13N has a
half life of ten minutes and the remaining isotopes have half lives on the order of seconds or less.
Biologically-mediated reactions (for example,
assimilation,
nitrification, and
denitrification) strongly control nitrogen dynamics in the soil. These reactions typically result in
15N enrichment of the
substrate and depletion of the
product.
0.73% of the molecular nitrogen in Earth's atmosphere is comprised of the
isotopologue 14N
15N and almost all the rest is
14N
2.
Electromagnetic spectrum
Molecular nitrogen (
14N
2) is largely transparent to infrared and visible radiation because it's a homonuclear molecule and thus has no
dipole moment to couple to electromagnetic radiation at these wavelengths. Significant absorption occurs at extreme ultraviolet wavelengths, beginning around 100 nanometers. This is associated with electronic transitions in the molecule to states in which charge isn't distributed evenly between nitrogen atoms. Nitrogen absorption leads to significant absorption of ultraviolet radiation in the Earth's upper atmosphere as well as in the atmospheres of other planetary bodies. For similar reasons, pure molecular
nitrogen lasers typically emit light in the ultraviolet range.
Nitrogen also makes a contribution to visible
air glow from the Earth's upper atmosphere, through electron impact excitation followed by emission. This visible blue air glow (seen in the polar
aurora and in the re-entry glow of returning spacecraft) typically results not from molecular nitrogen, but rather from free nitrogen atoms combining with oxygen to form
nitric oxide (NO).
History
Nitrogen (
Latin nitrogenium, where
nitrum (from
Greek nitron) means "saltpetre" (see
niter), and
genes means "forming") is formally considered to have been discovered by
Daniel Rutherford in
1772, who called it
noxious air or
fixed air. That there was a fraction of air that didn't support
combustion was well known to the late 18th century chemist. Nitrogen was also studied at about the same time by
Carl Wilhelm Scheele,
Henry Cavendish, and
Joseph Priestley, who referred to it as
burnt air or
phlogisticated air. Nitrogen gas was
inert enough that
Antoine Lavoisier referred to it as
azote, from the
Greek word αζωτος meaning "lifeless". Animals died in it, and it was the principal component of air in which animals had suffocated and flames had burned to extinction. This term has become the
French word for "nitrogen" and later spread out to many other languages.
Argon was discovered when it was noticed that nitrogen from air isn't identical to nitrogen from chemical reactions.
Compounds of nitrogen were known in the
Middle Ages. The
alchemists knew
nitric acid as
aqua fortis (strong water). The mixture of nitric and
hydrochloric acids was known as
aqua regia (royal water), celebrated for its ability to dissolve
gold (the
king of metals). The earliest industrial and
agricultural applications of nitrogen compounds involved uses in the form of
saltpeter (
sodium- or
potassium nitrate), notably in
gunpowder, and much later, as
fertilizer,
Biological role
Nitrogen is an essential part of
amino acids and
nucleic acids, both of which are essential to all life on Earth.
Molecular nitrogen in the atmosphere can't be used directly by either plants or animals, and needs to be converted into nitrogen compounds, or "fixed," in order to be used by life.
Precipitation often contains substantial quantities of
ammonium and nitrate, both thought to be a result of
nitrogen fixation by
lightning and other atmospheric electric phenomena. However, because
ammonium is preferentially retained by the
forest canopy relative to atmospheric nitrate, most of the fixed nitrogen that reaches the
soil surface under trees is in the form of nitrate. Soil nitrate is preferentially assimilated by tree
roots relative to soil ammonium.
Specific
bacteria (for example
Rhizobium trifolium) possess
nitrogenase enzymes which can fix atmospheric nitrogen (see
nitrogen fixation) into a form (ammonium ion) which is chemically useful to higher organisms. This process requires a large amount of energy and
anoxic conditions. Such bacteria may be free in the soil (for example
Azotobacter) but normally exist in a
symbiotic relationship in the
root nodules of leguminous plants (for example
clover,
Trifolium species, or the
soya bean plant,
Glycine max). Nitrogen-fixing bacteria can be symbiotic with a number of unrelated plant species. Common examples are legumes, alders (
Alnus) spp., lichens,
Casuarina,
Myrica, liverworts, and
Gunnera.
As part of the symbiotic relationship, the plant subsequently converts the ammonium ion to nitrogen oxides and amino acids to form
proteins and other biologically useful molecules, such as
alkaloids. In return for the usable (fixed) nitrogen, the plant secretes sugars to the symbiotic bacteria.
Some plants are able to assimilate nitrogen directly in the form of nitrates which may be present in soil from natural mineral deposits, artificial fertilizers, animal waste, or organic decay (as the product of bacteria, but not bacteria specifically associated with the plant). Nitrates absorbed in this fashion are converted to nitrites by the enzyme
nitrate reductase, and then converted to ammonia by another enzyme called
nitrite reductase.
Nitrogen compounds are basic building blocks in animal biology. Animals use nitrogen-containing
amino acids from plant sources, as starting materials for all nitrogen-compound animal biochemistry, including the manufacture of
proteins and
nucleic acids. Some plant-feeding insects are so dependent on nitrogen in their diet, that varying the amount of nitrogen fertilizer applied to a plant can affect the rate of reproduction of the insects feeding on it.
Soluble nitrate is an important limiting factor in the growth of certain bacteria in ocean waters. In many places in the world, artificial
fertilizers applied to crop-lands to increase yields result in run-off delivery of soluble nitrogen to oceans at river mouths. This process can result in
eutrophication of the water, as nitrogen-driven bacterial growth depletes water oxygen to the point that all higher organisms die. Well-known
"dead zone" areas in the U.S.
Gulf Coast and the
Black Sea are due to this important polluting process.
Many saltwater fish manufacture large amounts of
trimethylamine oxide to protect them from the high
osmotic effects of their environment (conversion of this compound to
dimethylamine is responsible for the early odor in unfresh saltwater fish: PMID 15186102). In animals, the
free radical molecule
nitric oxide (NO), which is derived from an
amino acid, serves as an important regulatory molecule for circulation.
Animal metabolism of NO results in production of
nitrite. Animal
metabolism of nitrogen in proteins generally results in
excretion of
urea, while animal metabolism of
nucleic acids results in excretion of
urea and
uric acid. The characteristic odor of animal flesh decay is caused by nitrogen-containing long-chain
amines, such as
putrescine and
cadaverine.
Decay of organisms and their waste products may produce small amounts of nitrate, but most decay eventually returns nitrogen content to the atmosphere, as molecular nitrogen.
Reactions
Nitrogen is generally unreactive at standard temperature and pressure. N
2 reacts spontaneously with few
reagents, being resilient to acids and bases as well as oxidants and most reductants. When nitrogen reacts spontaneously with a reagent, the net transformation is often called
nitrogen fixation.
Nitrogen reacts with elemental lithium at
STP. Lithium burns in an atmosphere of N
2 to give
lithium nitride:
» 6 Li + N
2 → 2 Li
3N
Magnesium also burns in nitrogen, forming
magnesium nitride.
» 3 Mg + N
2 → Mg
3N
2
N
2 forms a variety of
adducts with transition metals. The first example of a
dinitrogen complex is [Ru(NH
3)
5(N
2)]
2+ (see figure at right). Such compounds are now numerous, other examples include IrCl(N
2)(PPh
3)
2, W(N
2)
2(
Ph2CH2CH2PPh2)
2, and [(η
5-C
5Me
4H)
2Zr]
2(
μ2,
η²,η²-N
2). These complexes illustrate how N
2 might bind to the metal(s) in
nitrogenase and the catalyst for the
Haber-Bosch Process. A catalytic process to reduce N
2 to ammonia with the use of a
molybdenum complex in the presence of a proton source was published in 2005. An example occurred shortly before the launch of the first Space Shuttle mission in
1981, when two technicians lost consciousness and died after they walked into a space located in the Shuttle's
Mobile Launcher Platform that was pressurized with pure nitrogen as a precaution against fire. The technicians would have been able to exit the room if they'd experienced early symptoms from nitrogen-breathing.
When inhaled at high
partial pressures (more than about 3
atmospheres, encountered at depths below about 30 m in
scuba diving) nitrogen begins to act as an anesthetic agent. It can cause
nitrogen narcosis, a temporary semi-anesthetized state of mental impairment similar to that caused by
nitrous oxide.
Nitrogen also dissolves in the
bloodstream and body fats. Rapid decompression (particularly in the case of divers ascending too quickly, or astronauts decompressing too quickly from cabin pressure to spacesuit pressure) can lead to a potentially fatal condition called
decompression sickness (formerly known as caisson sickness or more commonly, the "bends"), when nitrogen bubbles form in the bloodstream, nerves, joints, and other sensitive or vital areas.
Direct skin contact with
liquid nitrogen causes severe
frostbite (cryogenic burns) within seconds, though not instantly on contact, depending on form of liquid nitrogen (liquid vs. mist) and surface area of the nitrogen-soaked material (soaked clothing or cotton causing more rapid damage than a spill of direct liquid to skin, which for a few seconds is protected by the
Leidenfrost effect).
Further Information
Get more info on 'Nitrogen'.
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