Palladium
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Palladium is a chemical element with the symbol Pd and atomic number 46. It is a rare, shiny, silvery-white metal. An English scientist named William Hyde Wollaston discovered it in 1802. He named it after the asteroid Pallas, which was named for the Greek goddess Athena.
Palladium belongs to a group of metals called the platinum group. This group includes platinum, rhodium, ruthenium, iridium, and osmium. Palladium has the lowest melting point and is the least dense of these metals.
Palladium is very important. More than half of it is used in catalytic converters in cars. These help change harmful gases from car exhaust into safe substances. Palladium is also used in electronics, dentistry, medicine, and even in jewelry.
Palladium is not easy to find in nature. Big amounts are found in places like the Bushveld Igneous Complex in South Africa, the Stillwater Complex in Montana, United States, the Sudbury Basin and Thunder Bay District in Ontario, Canada, and the Norilsk Complex in Russia. Because it is rare and useful, palladium is often bought and sold like other precious metals. It can be found in the form of palladium coins and bars.
Characteristics
Palladium is a soft, silver-white metal that looks like platinum. It is the least dense and has the lowest melting point of the platinum group metals. When heated, palladium can get a slight brownish color.
Palladium does not react with oxygen at normal temperatures, so it does not change color in air. It can dissolve in certain acids, such as nitric acid, sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, and a special mix called aqua regia.
Isotopes
Main article: Isotopes of palladium
Naturally occurring palladium is made up of six stable types, called isotopes. Scientists have found many other radioactive isotopes of palladium, which change over time. Some of these change by capturing electrons and become rhodium, while others change by beta decay and become silver.
One special isotope, 107Pd, was found in a meteorite and is also made when certain types of uranium break apart. It is considered one of the less harmful long-lasting products from such breakdowns.
| Z | Element | No. of electrons/shell |
|---|---|---|
| 28 | nickel | 2, 8, 16, 2 (or 2, 8, 17, 1) |
| 46 | palladium | 2, 8, 18, 18, 0 |
| 78 | platinum | 2, 8, 18, 32, 17, 1 |
| 110 | darmstadtium | 2, 8, 18, 32, 32, 16, 2 (predicted) |
Compounds
Palladium can form different compounds in two main ways. These compounds are similar to those of platinum.
One important compound is made when palladium mixes with chlorine. This helps create useful materials and special chemical reactions. Palladium can also mix with other substances to make important fine chemicals. Some of these compounds were honored with a special prize in chemistry in 2010.
Occurrence
Palladium is found in mines around the world. Russia makes the most, followed by South Africa, Canada, the U.S., and Zimbabwe.
It is found mixed with other metals, like gold, in places such as the Ural Mountains, Australia, Ethiopia, and parts of North and South America. The main sources come from areas with lots of nickel and copper, like the Sudbury Basin in Ontario and the Norilsk–Talnakh area in Siberia. Other important places include the Merensky Reef in South Africa, and areas in Montana and Ontario.
Applications
Palladium is mainly used in special parts that help cars clean up harmful gases. It is also used to make beautiful jewellery, fix teeth, create precise timepieces, test blood sugar, build safe airplane parts, make important medical tools, and connect electric circuits. Some musical instruments, like special flutes, are made with palladium, too. Palladium can store and release hydrogen gas, which makes it useful in experiments and for checking carbon monoxide gas. It is also used in making strong metal mixtures and in creating very fine art prints that last a long time.
Catalysis
See also: Palladium-catalyzed coupling reactions
When broken into tiny pieces, palladium helps speed up important chemical reactions. It is used in making many useful products, like medicines and fuels, by helping join different parts of molecules together. Important discoveries about these reactions won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2010.
Palladium helps create new kinds of materials for medicine and makes fuels cleaner.
Electronics
Palladium is used in tiny parts inside computers and other electronic devices. It helps make connections work better and lasts longer.
Technology
Palladium lets hydrogen gas pass through it easily when heated, which is useful for cleaning and studying hydrogen. It is also used in special tools to detect dangerous gases.
Hydrogen storage
Palladium can hold onto hydrogen gas very well, which scientists study for future ways to store clean fuel.
Medicine
Palladium is used in tiny amounts in tooth fillings and in the making of heart helpers that keep a steady beat.
Jewellery
Since 1939, palladium has been used to make shiny, white jewellery as a substitute for a more expensive metal. It can be shaped very thinly and keeps its beautiful look.
Photography
Palladium is used in a special way to make long-lasting art prints that show details very clearly.
Effects on health
Palladium is a metal that usually does not hurt the body right away. But over time, it might harm cells in the liver and kidney.
People do not usually absorb much palladium from food or drink. Some plants can be harmed by small amounts, but most plants are okay. Very high amounts of palladium could be dangerous, but there is not strong proof that it harms humans in normal situations.
Like other metals in the platinum group, palladium does not react much. Some people might have skin reactions from contact with it, especially if they are sensitive to nickel. It is best to avoid dental work with palladium if you are allergic to nickel.
Small amounts of palladium can come from car exhausts with catalytic converters and from some dental work, but the amounts people usually get are very small. Workers who handle palladium might be exposed to more. Soluble forms of palladium, like palladium chloride, are mostly removed from the body within a few days.
History
William Hyde Wollaston discovered a new metal in July 1802 and named it palladium in August that year. He named it after the asteroid 2 Pallas, which had been found two months earlier. Wollaston shared his discovery in a shop in Soho in April 1803 without saying who found it.
Palladium was found in platinum ore from South America. Wollaston used special steps to separate the metal from the ore. Later, palladium was used to help with a sickness, but better medicines were found. Today, most palladium is used in cars to help clean up exhaust fumes. Because it is valuable, some people steal these parts from cars. The price of palladium has changed a lot over the years.
Palladium as investment
Palladium is used in many ways, including in cars, jewelry, and investments. Most of the world’s palladium comes from mines in South Africa, with Russia and mines in the United States and Canada also contributing a lot.
The price of palladium changed a lot over the years. It reached a very high price in 2021 because many cars needed it, but then the price dropped. Palladium can be bought and sold in markets around the world. Sometimes, extra palladium from old stockpiles in Russia affected the price.
Palladium producers
Exchange-traded products
WisdomTree Physical Palladium (LSE: PHPD) is a special kind of investment tied to real palladium metal. It can be bought on many stock markets around the world. ETFS Physical Palladium Shares (NYSE: PALL) is another investment option available on the New York Stock Exchange.
Bullion coins and bars
People can also invest in palladium by buying special coins and bars made from it. Some popular palladium coins include the Canadian Palladium Maple Leaf, the Chinese Panda, and the American Palladium Eagle. However, there are fewer palladium coins available compared to more common precious metals like gold, platinum, and silver.
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