You're right. Use your rules for heterogenous compounds now for the products. Oxygen when combined with nitrogen has an oxidation state of...? -2. But your overall compound has a net charge of 0 and a molecular formula of N2O. So 2*(oxidation state of N) + -2 (the oxidation state we already have given by oxidation rules for oxygen being bonded to nitrogen) = 0
solve for the oxidation state of N.
Ok I think i'm starting to understand, but i've got a few more questions:
1. So the oxidation state of N is +1 since there are 2 N atoms for every 1 O atom, right?
2. The coefficients always get ignored when looking at oxidation states, right?
3. Why is that in the compound 2NH
3 the anion comes first? I thought the cation came first, or is that only in ionic compounds?