I really do not know, but I do not think that elemental phosphorous readily reacts nitrogen directly. There seems to be very little information about this available.
"phosphorous nitride, P3N5
White, odorless, tasteless; decomposes into its elements in vacuum at high temperature. Insoluble in all solvents. Heating with water in a sealed tube to 180 °C decomposes P3N5, forming H3PO4 and NH3. Oxygen affects it (ignition) only at temperatures above 600 °C."
Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry 2nd ed
Another source described "another form of phosphorous nitride sublimes" towards 1000 °C. The heat of formation of P3N5 was experimentally calculated at "70.4 cals" (-43.9 kcal/mol ?).
"Above 800 °C, P3N5 decomposes, evolving nitrogen: P3N5 --> 3 PN + N2
Phosphorous(III) nitride, PΞN, ... is metastable with respect to decomposition into P2 and N2, PN --> 1/2 P2 + 1/2 N2; Δ= -98 kJ ), but at low temperatures it polymerises into a coloroless phosphorous(III) nitride. In addition to the above compounds, there are intractable yellow to brown nitrides with high melting points and stoiciometries that lie somewhere between PN and P3N5.
"Inorganic Chemistry", Egon Wiberg, A. F. Holleman, Nils Wiberg, p737
None of the sources I have found make any mention to direct reaction between P4 and N2.
"Thus phosphorus nitride is formed comparatively readily only when nitrogen interacts with atomic phosphorus..."
The literature data on the methods of preparation, structures, and properties of phosphorus nitrides PN, poly(phosphorus nitrides) (PN), (P3N5), ... are surveyed and their practical applications, formed as a result of the direct binding of molecular nitrogen... are examined.
"Phosphorus Nitrides", Evgenii V Borisov and E E Nifant'ev
I suppose the ideal experiment would bring vaporised P4 at a high temperature in contact with nitrogen gas, then see if any PN polymer formed as a powder. Simply trying to heat solid phosphorous with nitrogen would not work, because the nitride would potentially form a protective coating, with a high decomposition temperature, that would inhibit further reaction.