enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Palladium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladium

    Palladium-gold is more expensive than nickel-gold, but seldom causes allergic reactions (though certain cross-allergies with nickel may occur). [67] When platinum became a strategic resource during World War II, many jewelry bands were made out of palladium. Palladium was little used in jewelry because of the technical difficulty of casting.

  3. Platinum group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platinum_group

    Palladium is found as a free metal and alloyed with platinum and gold with platinum group metals in placer deposits of the Ural Mountains of Eurasia, Australia, Ethiopia, South and North America. However it is commercially produced from nickel- copper deposits found in South Africa and Ontario, Canada .

  4. Palladium (III) compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladium(III)_compounds

    In chemistry, compounds of palladium(III) feature the noble metal palladium in the unusual +3 oxidation state (in most of its compounds, palladium has the oxidation state II). Compounds of Pd(III) occur in mononuclear and dinuclear forms. Palladium(III) is most often invoked, not observed in mechanistic organometallic chemistry. [1] [2]

  5. Palladium compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladium_compounds

    Palladium forms a variety of ionic, coordination, and organopalladium compounds, typically with oxidation state Pd 0 or Pd 2+. Palladium(III) compounds have also been reported. Palladium compounds are frequently used as catalysts in cross-coupling reactions such as the Sonogashira coupling and Suzuki reaction .

  6. Palladium hydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladium_hydride

    Palladium hydride is palladium metal with hydrogen within its crystal lattice. Despite its name, it is not an ionic hydride but rather an alloy of palladium with metallic hydrogen that can be written PdH x. At room temperature, palladium hydrides may contain two crystalline phases, α and β (also called α′).

  7. Precious metal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precious_metal

    Although aluminium is the third most abundant element and the most abundant metal in the Earth's crust, it was at first found to be exceedingly difficult to extract the metal from its various non-metallic ores. The great expense of refining the metal made the small available quantity of pure aluminium more valuable than gold. [16]

  8. Group 10 element - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_10_element

    Palladium was in a residue left behind after platinum was precipitated out of a solution of hydrochloric acid and nitric acid as (NH 4)PtCl 6. [12] Wollaston named it after the recently discovered asteroid 2 Pallas and anonymously sold small samples of the metal to a shop, which advertised it as a "new noble metal" called "Palladium, or New ...

  9. Isotopes of palladium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_palladium

    Natural palladium (46 Pd) is composed of six stable isotopes, 102 Pd, 104 Pd, 105 Pd, 106 Pd, 108 Pd, and 110 Pd, although 102 Pd and 110 Pd are theoretically unstable. The most stable radioisotopes are 107 Pd with a half-life of 6.5 million years, 103 Pd with a half-life of 17 days, and 100 Pd with a half-life of 3.63 days.