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15n

15N is a stable isotope of nitrogen with mass number 15. It contains 7 protons and 8 neutrons, giving an atomic number of 7. Among nitrogen's stable isotopes, 14N is far more abundant. The natural abundance of 15N in nitrogen-bearing materials is about 0.37%, with the remainder mainly being 14N. Isotopic ratios are commonly expressed as δ15N to characterize nitrogen sources and transformations in environmental and biological systems.

In nature, 15N is produced in stellar nucleosynthesis and is present in Earth's atmosphere as part of

15N is widely used as a stable isotope tracer in biochemistry, agriculture, and environmental science. It is

Because it is stable, 15N does not pose radiological hazards. Production of enriched 15N for research uses

nitrogen
gas
(N2)
together
with
14N.
It
is
non-radioactive
and
does
not
decay
over
time.
incorporated
into
amino
acids,
nucleotides,
and
other
biomolecules
to
study
metabolic
pathways.
In
analytical
chemistry,
15N
labeling
aids
detection
in
mass
spectrometry
and
enables
quantitative
isotope
tracing.
In
nuclear
magnetic
resonance
spectroscopy,
15N
has
nuclear
spin
I
=
1/2,
unlike
14N
which
has
I
=
1,
a
property
that
makes
15N
NMR
particularly
useful
for
studying
proteins,
nucleic
acids,
and
other
labeled
samples.
isotope
separation
techniques
such
as
fractional
distillation
of
nitrogen
gas
or
chemical
exchange
methods.