Common NameN2
DescriptionElemental nitrogen is a colorless, odorless, tasteless and mostly inert diatomic gas at standard conditions, constituting 78% by volume of Earth's atmosphere. Nitrogen occurs in all living organisms. It is a constituent element of amino acids and therefore of proteins and nucleic acids (DNA and RNA). Nitrogen is found in the chemical structure of almost all neurotransmitters and is a key component of alkaloids. Specific bacteria (e.g. Rhizobium trifolium) possess nitrogenase enzymes which can fix atmospheric nitrogen into a form (ammonium ion) which is chemically useful to higher organisms. 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. Animal metabolism of NO (nitric oxide) 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. The circulation of nitrogen from the atmosphere through organics and then back to the atmosphere is commonly referred to as the nitrogen cycle. Nitrogen can be measured in urine with the Kjeldahl method or by spectrophotometric methods (enzymic tests). Total urinary nitrogen is calculated based on urea urinary nitrogen quantified with these methods.
Structure
Molecular FormulaN2
Average Mass28.01340
Monoisotopic Mass28.00615
IUPAC Namediazyne
Traditional NameNitrogen
CAS Registry Number7727-37-9
SMILESN#N
InChI IdentifierInChI=1S/N2/c1-2
InChI KeyIJGRMHOSHXDMSA-UHFFFAOYSA-N
CHEBI IDCHEBI:17997
HMDB IDHMDB0001371
StateNot Available
Water SolubilityNot Available
logP0.31
logSNot Available
pKa (Strongest Acidic)Not Available
pKa (Strongest Basic)Not Available
Hydrogen Acceptor Count2
Hydrogen Donor Count0
Polar Surface Area47.58 Ų
Rotatable Bond Count0
Physiological Charge0
Formal Charge0
Refractivity26.23 m³·mol⁻¹
Polarizability1.77

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