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Oxide dinitrogen

Dinitrogen oxide, nitrous oxide, N2O. Colourless gas, m.p. —9T C, b.p. —88-5°C (heat on NH4NO3). Decomposes to N2 and O2 above SOO C can be detonated. Linear molecule NNO. Used as a mild anaesthetic. [Pg.278]

Note that dinitrogen oxide is the other product. In alkaline solution, however, hydroxylamine oxidises iron(II) hydroxide to iron(III) hydroxide and is itself reduced to ammonia. This is an example of the effect of pH change on oxidation-reduction behaviour (p. 101). ... [Pg.223]

The azides are salts which resemble the chlorides in solubility behaviour, for example silver azide, AgNj, is insoluble and sodium azide, NaN3, soluble in water. Sodium azide is prepared by passing dinitrogen oxide over molten sodamide ... [Pg.225]

This can be prepared by the controlled reduction of a nitrite (nitrate(lll)) or nitrate. Cautious heating of ammonium nitrate gives dinitrogen oxide by an internal oxidation-reduction process ... [Pg.228]

Too rapid heating produces explosive decomposition. The reaction between hydroxyammonium chloride, NHjOH. Cl , and sodium nitrite gives pure dinitrogen oxide ... [Pg.228]

Dinitrogen oxide is a colourless gas the molecule has the geometric structure N—N—O, and is a resonance hybrid of the two forms... [Pg.228]

Reduction products vary depending on the reducing agent, for example dinitrogen oxide is obtained with sulphurous acid, nitrogen is obtained when the gas is passed over heated metals (e.g. copper and iron) and ammonia is produced when the gas reacts with aqueous chromiumfll) salts. [Pg.231]

Metals which do liberate hydrogen from dilute acids, for example zinc, magnesium, can react with nitric acid to give dinitrogen oxide, for example ... [Pg.241]

Ammonium nitrate gives dinitrogen oxide and steam ... [Pg.242]

The other more electronegative elements are non-metals and form oxides which are entirely covalent and usually acidic. For example, sulphur yields the oxides SO2 and SO3, dissolving in bases to form the ions SO3 and SO4" respectively. A few non-metallic oxides are often described as neutral (for example carbon monoxide and dinitrogen oxide) because no directly related acid anion is known to exist. [Pg.286]

Reduction of dinitrogen oxide to ammonia (which gives the ammonium ion with the acid) ... [Pg.334]

Stick-kohlenstoff, m. carbon nitride, -luft, /. close air nitrogen, -oiyd, n. nitric oxide, -oiydentbindung, /. liberation of nitric oxide, -oxydul, n. nitrous oxide, dinitrogen oxide, -stoff, m. nitrogen. [Pg.428]

WEB Dinitrogen oxide, commonly called nitrous oxide, is used as a propellant gas for whipped-cream dispensers. It is prepared by heating ammonium nitrate to 250°C Water vapor is also formed. [Pg.128]

When ammonia reacts with dinitrogen oxide gas (AH = 82.05 kj/mol), liquid water and nitrogen gas are formed. How much heat is liberated or absorbed by the reaction that produces 345 mL of nitrogen gas at 25°C and 717 mm Hg ... [Pg.223]

NO (nitrogen oxide or nitric oxide) NzO (dinitrogen oxide or nitrous oxide)... [Pg.564]

Heme d,6 another isobacteriochlorin, occurs as one of two cofactors in the reductase cytochrome cdj which mediates the nitrite reduction to nitrogen monoxide (NO) and from there to dinitrogen oxide (N20) in denitrifying bacteria.7... [Pg.644]

Resonance occurs only between structures with the same arrangement of atoms. For example, although we might be able to write two hypothetical structures for the dinitrogen oxide (nitrous oxide) molecule, NNO and NON, there is no resonance between them, because the atoms lie in different locations. [Pg.195]

Dinitrogen oxide, N20, gas was generated from the thermal decomposition of ammonium nitrate and collected over water. The wet gas occupied 126 mL at 21°C when the atmospheric pressure was 755 Torr. What volume would the same amount of dry dinitrogen oxide have occupied if collected at 755 Torr and 21°C The vapor pressure of water is... [Pg.295]

The azide ion is a highly reactive polyatomic anion of nitrogen, N3 . Its most common salt, sodium azide, NaN3, is prepared from dinitrogen oxide and molten sodium amide ... [Pg.747]

Dinitrogen oxide, NzO (oxidation number +1), is commonly called nitrous oxide. It is formed by heating ammonium nitrate gently ... [Pg.748]

Determine the Lewis structure of dinitrogen oxide (NNO), a gas used as an anesthetic, a foaming agent, and a propellant for whipped cream. [Pg.601]

Evaluate the three potential resonance structures of dinitrogen oxide using their formal charges. The third structure shows more accumulation of formal charge than the first two. Thus, the optimal Lewis stmcture of the NNO molecule is a composite of the first two structures, but not the third ... [Pg.602]

Triatomic species can be linear, like CO2, or bent, like O3. The principles of orbital overlap do not depend on the identity of the atoms involved, so all second-row triatomic species with 16 valence electrons have the same bonding scheme as CO2 and are linear. For example, dinitrogen oxide (N2 O) has 16 valence electrons, so it has an orbital configuration identical to that of CO2. Each molecule is linear with an inner atom whose steric number is 2. As in CO2, the bonding framework of N2 O can be represented with sp hybrid orbitals. Both molecules have two perpendicular sets of three tt molecular orbitals. The resonance structures of N2 O, described... [Pg.712]

Mixtures of acetylene and dinitrogen oxide used to create flames in atomic absorption apparatus detonate in the presence of perchloric acid. [Pg.247]

See Halogens or Interhalogens, above Calcium chromate Boron Dinitrogen oxide Boron... [Pg.65]


See other pages where Oxide dinitrogen is mentioned: [Pg.199]    [Pg.228]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.230]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.495]    [Pg.730]    [Pg.1031]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.219]   
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Dinitrogen

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Dinitrogen oxidation

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Oxidation of dinitrogen

Oxidation with dinitrogen oxide

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