Yes, they require High pressure air (nitrogen) tanks. They cannot run off of CO2.
No, they cannot.
No, tanks for compressed nitrogen and liquid nitrogen are designed differently. Tanks for compressed nitrogen store nitrogen gas under high pressure, while tanks for liquid nitrogen store nitrogen in its liquid form at extremely low temperatures. It is important to use the correct type of tank for the specific form of nitrogen being stored.
Nitrogen typically forms diatomic molecules (N2) and does not normally exist as ions in its elemental state. However, nitrogen can form ions with a charge of -3 (nitride ions) in certain compounds.
Nitrogen.
Yes, any nitrogen tank is refillable.
Plants obtain the nitrogen they need from the soil in the form of nitrates or ammonium ions. These compounds are taken up by the plant's roots and used in various biological processes such as protein synthesis. In agriculture, nitrogen can also be supplied to plants through fertilizers containing nitrogen compounds.
Sodium will form Na+ ions, aluminum will form Al3+ ions, calcium will form Ca2+ ions, sulfur will form S2- ions, and nitrogen will form N3- ions.
Yes they are the same.
It would displace oxygen and reduce the corrosion of the tanks.
Yes, nitrate ions (NO3-) can be converted into nitrite ions (NO2-) through a process called denitrification, and both nitrate and nitrite ions can be further converted into nitrous oxide (N2O) and nitrogen gas (N2) through microbial processes in the environment. This transformation is part of the nitrogen cycle, where different forms of nitrogen are interconverted by microorganisms to maintain ecological balance.
Magnesium and nitrogen have an ionic bond. Magnesium, a metal, transfers electrons to nitrogen, a nonmetal, resulting in the formation of magnesium ions and nitride ions.
It would displace oxygen and reduce the corrosion of the tanks.