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  2. SN2 reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SN2_reaction

    Competition experiment between SN2 and E2. With ethyl bromide, the reaction product is predominantly the substitution product. As steric hindrance around the electrophilic center increases, as with isobutyl bromide, substitution is disfavored and elimination is the predominant reaction. Other factors favoring elimination are the strength of the ...

  3. Chemically inert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemically_inert

    Nevertheless, nitrogen gas does react with the alkali metal lithium to form compound lithium nitride (Li 3 N), even under ordinary conditions. Under high pressures and temperatures and with the right catalysts, nitrogen becomes more reactive; the Haber process uses such conditions to produce ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen.

  4. Reactive nitrogen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactive_nitrogen

    Reactive nitrogen ("Nr"), also known as fixed nitrogen [1], refers to all forms of nitrogen present in the environment except for molecular nitrogen (N 2 ). [ 2 ] While nitrogen is an essential element for life on Earth, molecular nitrogen is comparatively unreactive, and must be converted to other chemical forms via nitrogen fixation before it ...

  5. Solid nitrogen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_nitrogen

    The semi-solid mixture can also be called slush nitrogen [63] or SN2. [64] Solid nitrogen is used as a matrix on which to store and study reactive chemical species, such as free radicals or isolated atoms. [65] One use is to study dinitrogen complexes of metals in isolation from other molecules. [66]

  6. Noble gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noble_gas

    Before them, in 1784, the English chemist and physicist Henry Cavendish had discovered that air contains a small proportion of a substance less reactive than nitrogen. [10] A century later, in 1895, Lord Rayleigh discovered that samples of nitrogen from the air were of a different density than nitrogen resulting from chemical reactions.

  7. Ionized-air glow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionized-air_glow

    Nitrogen glow Oxygen glow Electrical discharge in air Particle beam from a cyclotron. Ionized-air glow is the luminescent emission of characteristic blue–purple–violet light, often of a color called electric blue, by air subjected to an energy flux either directly or indirectly from solar radiation.

  8. German Doctors Are Attempting to Reverse Death and Resurrect ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/german-doctors-attempting...

    A company called Tomorrow Biostasis is focusing on human cryopreservation in the hopes it can eventually reverse death.. The new Berlin startup has already preserved the bodies of about 10 ...

  9. Noble gas compound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noble_gas_compound

    From the standpoint of chemistry, the noble gases may be divided into two groups: [citation needed] the relatively reactive krypton (ionisation energy 14.0 eV), xenon (12.1 eV), and radon (10.7 eV) on one side, and the very unreactive argon (15.8 eV), neon (21.6 eV), and helium (24.6 eV) on the other.