nitrogen
(noun)
A chemical element (symbol N) with an atomic number of 7 and atomic weight of 14.0067 amu.
Examples of nitrogen in the following topics:
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The Nitrogen Cycle
- Nitrogen is cycled through the earth via the multi-step process of nitrogen fixation, which is carried out by bacteria.
- Cyanobacteria are able to use inorganic sources of nitrogen to "fix" nitrogen.
- The nitrogen that enters living systems by nitrogen fixation is successively converted from organic nitrogen back into nitrogen gas by bacteria .
- Nitrogen enters the living world from the atmosphere via nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
- This nitrogen and nitrogenous waste from animals is then processed back into gaseous nitrogen by soil bacteria, which also supply terrestrial food webs with the organic nitrogen they need.
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Nitrogenase and Nitrogen Fixation
- Nitrogen fixation also refers to other biological conversions of nitrogen, such as its conversion to nitrogen dioxide.
- Nitrogen fixation is a process by which nitrogen (N2) in the atmosphere is converted into ammonia (NH3).
- Atmospheric nitrogen or elemental nitrogen (N2) is relatively inert: it does not easily react with other chemicals to form new compounds.
- Microorganisms that fix nitrogen are bacteria called diazotrophs.
- Biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) occurs when atmospheric nitrogen is converted to ammonia by an enzyme called nitrogenase.
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The Nitrogen Cycle
- The nitrogen cycle is the process by which nitrogen is converted from organic to inorganic forms; many steps are performed by microbes.
- The nitrogen cycle describes the conversion of nitrogen between different chemical forms.
- Nitrogen is essential for the formation of amino acids and nucleotides.
- De-Nitrification: Nitrogen in its nitrate form (NO3-) is converted back into atmospheric nitrogen gas (N2) by bacterial species such as Pseudomonas and Clostridium, usually in anaerobic conditions.
- Describe the nitrogen cycle and how it is affected by human activity
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Properties of Nitrogen
- Nitrogen in its elemental form is a non-metallic gas that makes up 78 percent of Earth's atmosphere.
- Nitrogen compounds were well known during the Middle Ages.
- Nitrogen is a chemical element with symbol N and atomic number 7.
- Nitrogen is a nonmetal with an electronegativity of 3.04.
- The triple bond in molecular nitrogen (N2) is one of the strongest known.
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Symbiosis between Bacteria and Eukaryotes
- Prokaryotes fix nitrogen into a form that can be used by eukaryotes.
- Nitrogen is usually the most limiting element in terrestrial ecosystems.
- Atmospheric nitrogen, N2, provides the largest pool of available nitrogen.
- Nitrogenase, the enzyme that fixes nitrogen, is inactivated by oxygen, so the nodule provides an oxygen-free area for nitrogen fixation to take place.
- Through symbiotic nitrogen fixation, the plant benefits from using an endless source of nitrogen: the atmosphere.
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Nitrogen Fixation: Root and Bacteria Interactions
- Atmospheric nitrogen, which is the diatomic molecule N2, or dinitrogen, is the largest pool of nitrogen in terrestrial ecosystems.
- However, nitrogen can be "fixed."
- Through symbiotic nitrogen fixation, the plant benefits from using an endless source of nitrogen from the atmosphere.
- Schematic representation of the nitrogen cycle.
- Abiotic nitrogen fixation has been omitted.
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Stereogenic Nitrogen
- A close examination of the ephedrine and pseudoephedrine isomers suggests that another stereogenic center, the nitrogen, is present.
- Since the nitrogen in these compounds is bonded to three different groups, its configuration is chiral.
- However, pyramidal nitrogen is normally not configurationally stable.
- If the nitrogen atom were the only chiral center in the molecule, a 50:50 (racemic) mixture of R and S configurations would exist at equilibrium.
- In any event, nitrogen groups such as this, if present in a compound, do not contribute to isolable stereoisomers.
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Early Discoveries in Nitrogen Fixation
- Nitrogen fixation carried out by bacteria helps farmers yield healthy crops.
- Hermann Hellriegel (1831-1895), a noted German agricultural chemist, discovered that leguminous plants took atmospheric nitrogen and replenished the ammonium in the soil through the process now known as nitrogen fixation.
- He found that the nodules on the roots of legumes are the location where nitrogen fixation takes place.
- Hellriegel did not determine what factors in the root nodules carried out nitrogen fixation.
- These rhizobia perform the chemical processes of nitrogen fixation.
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Genetics and Regulation of N2 Fixation
- Through control of gene expression, nitrogen fixing bacteria can turn on and off the proteins needed for nitrogen fixation.
- The fixation of atmospheric nitrogen (N2) is a very energy intensive endeavor.
- The nif genes are responsible for the coding of proteins related and associated with the fixation of atmospheric nitrogen into a form of nitrogen available to plants.
- These genes are found in nitrogen fixing bacteria and cyanobacteria.
- Discuss the role of the nif genes in controlling nitrogen fixation
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Nitrogen Compounds
- The nitrogen-nitrogen triple bond in N2 contains 226 kcal/mol of energy, making it one of the strongest bonds known.
- When nitrogen gas is formed as a product from various reactions, the bond energy associated with the N-N triple bond is released, causing the explosive properties seen in many nitrogen compounds.
- This is one of a variety of nitrogen oxides that form a family often abbreviated as NOx.
- Nitrogen triiodide (NI3) is an extremely sensitive contact explosive.
- In all cases, the explosive properties of nitrogen compounds are derived from the extreme stability of the product of these reactions: gaseous molecular nitrogen, N2.