Benzene diazonium chloride cannot be stored and is used immediately after its preparation because it is very unstable with a slight high in temperature and dissociates to give nitrogen.
The diazonium reaction uses nitrous acid to convert phenylamine into the diazonium salt benzene diazonium chloride (C6H5N2+Cl−). Nitrous acid decomposes very readily and so cannot be stored.
The temperature must be kept below 50C in an ice bath during diazotization otherwise the main product decomposes, losing its N2 atoms as N2 gas.