Dinitrogen crystals At ambient and moderate pressures, nitrogen forms dinitrogen| molecules; at low temperature
London dispersion forces suffice to solidify these molecules.
α and β Solid nitrogen admits two phases at ambient pressure: α- and β-nitrogen. Below , nitrogen adopts a
cubic structure with
space group Pa3; the molecules are located on the body diagonals of the unit cell cube. At low temperatures the α-phase can be compressed to before it changes (to γ), and as the temperature rises above , this pressure rises to about . At , the unit cell dimension is , decreasing to under . Above (until it melts), nitrogen adopts a
hexagonal close packed structure, with unit cell ratio . The nitrogen molecules are randomly tipped at an angle of , due to strong
quadrupole-quadrupole interaction. At the unit cell has and , but these shrink at and to and . At higher pressures, the displays practically no variation. and take the shape of a
prolate spheroid with long dimension and diameter . The molecules can vibrate up to on the plane, and up to in the direction of the axis. δ- admits two triple points. The (δ-, β-, liquid) triple point occurs somewhere around and . At high pressure (roughly ) and low temperature, the dinitrogen molecule orientations fully order into the
rhombohedral ε phase, which follows space group
Rc. Cell dimensions are , , , , , volume , . Dissolved can stabilize ε- at higher temperatures or lower pressures from transforming into δ- (see ).
θ and ι Further compression and heating produces two crystalline phases of nitrogen with surprising metastability. A ζ- phase compressed to and then heated to over produces a uniformly translucent structure called θ-nitrogen. The ι- crystal structure is characterised by primitive monoclinic lattice with unit-cell dimensions of: , , and at and ambient temperature. The space group is
P21/
c and the unit cell contains 48 molecules arranged into a layered structure. Upon pressure release, θ- does not return to ε- until around ; ι- transforms to ε- until around . nitrogen adopts a crystal structure ("bp-N") identical to that of
black phosphorus (orthorhombic,
Cmce space group). Like black phosphorus, bp-N is an electrical conductor. The existence of bp-N structure matches the behavior of heavier
pnictogens, and reaffirms the trend that elements at high pressure adopt the same structures as
heavier congeners at lower pressures.
Oligomer crystals Hexagonal layered polymeric nitrogen Hexagonal layered polymeric nitrogen (HLP-N) was experimentally synthesized at and . It adopts a tetragonal unit cell (
P42
bc) in which the single-bonded nitrogen atoms form two layers of interconnected hexagons. HPL-N is metastable to at least 66 GPa.
Linear forms (N6 and N8) The decomposition of
hydrazinium azide at high pressure and low temperature produces a molecular solid made of linear chains of 8 nitrogen atoms (). Simulations suggest that is stable at low temperatures and pressures (6 as predicted in 2016 Theoretical analyses in 2016 predicted that an analogous allotrope with six nitrogens should exist at ambient conditions.
Amorphous and network allotropes Non-molecular forms of solid nitrogen exhibit the highest known non-nuclear energy density.
η η-N is a semiconducting amorphous form of nitrogen. It forms at pressures around and temperatures . In reflected light it appears black, but does transmit some red or yellow light. In the infrared there is an absorption band around . Under even higher pressure of approximately , the
band gap closes and η-nitrogen metallizes.
Cubic gauche At pressures higher than and temperatures around , nitrogen forms a
network solid, bound by
covalent bonds in a
cubic-gauche structure, abbreviated as cg-N. The cubic-gauche form has space group
I213. Each unit cell has edge length , and contains eight nitrogen atoms. All bonds in cg-N have the same length: at . This suggests that all bonds have the same
order: a
single bond carrying . In contrast, the
triple bond in
gaseous nitrogen carries only , so that relaxation to the gaseous form involves tremendous energy release: more than any other non-nuclear reaction. For this reason, cubic-gauche nitrogen is being investigated for use in explosives and rocket fuel. cg-N is also very stiff with a
bulk modulus around , similar to diamond.
Others Yet other phases of solid dinitrogen are termed ζ'-N2 and κ-N2. ==Bulk properties==