of a
metal-core catalytic converter is a rare example of the monetary usage of palladium. The largest use of palladium today is in catalytic converters.
watch making, blood sugar test strips, aircraft
spark plugs,
surgical instruments, and
electrical contacts. Palladium is also used to make some professional
transverse (concert or classical) flutes. As a commodity, palladium
bullion has
ISO currency codes of XPD and 964. Palladium is one of only four metals to have such codes, the others being
gold,
silver and platinum. Because it
adsorbs hydrogen, palladium was a key component of the controversial
cold fusion experiments of the late 1980s.
Catalysis When it is finely divided, as with
palladium on carbon, palladium forms a versatile
catalyst; it speeds
heterogeneous catalytic processes like
hydrogenation,
dehydrogenation, and
petroleum cracking. Palladium is also essential to the
Lindlar catalyst, also called Lindlar's Palladium. A large number of
carbon–carbon bonding reactions in
organic chemistry are facilitated by palladium compound catalysts. For example: •
Heck reaction •
Suzuki coupling •
Tsuji-Trost reactions •
Wacker process •
Negishi reaction •
Stille coupling •
Sonogashira coupling When dispersed on conductive materials, palladium is an excellent electrocatalyst for oxidation of primary alcohols in alkaline media. Palladium is also a versatile metal for
homogeneous catalysis, used in combination with a broad variety of
ligands for highly selective chemical transformations. In 2010 the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded "for palladium-catalyzed cross couplings in organic synthesis" to
Richard F. Heck,
Ei-ichi Negishi and
Akira Suzuki. A 2008 study showed that palladium is an effective catalyst for
carbon–fluorine bonds. Palladium catalysis is primarily employed in organic chemistry and industrial applications, although its use is growing as a tool for
synthetic biology; in 2017, effective
in vivo catalytic activity of palladium
nanoparticles was demonstrated in mammals to treat disease. Palladium is also used as a catalyst in the production of
biofuels.
Electronics The primary application of palladium in electronics is in
multi-layer ceramic capacitors in which palladium (and palladium-silver alloy) is used for electrodes. and in soldering materials. The electronic sector consumed of palladium in 2006, according to a
Johnson Matthey report. Palladium is used in the production of
printed circuit boards.
Technology Hydrogen easily diffuses through heated palladium, Palladium is used in
palladium-hydrogen electrodes in electrochemical studies.
Palladium(II) chloride readily catalyzes carbon monoxide gas to carbon dioxide and is useful in
carbon monoxide detectors. Palladium has been used to produce
metallic glass by fast cooling alloys, avoiding their crystallisation, thus reducing brittleness and leading to stronger materials.
Hydrogen storage Palladium readily
adsorbs hydrogen at room temperatures, forming
palladium hydride PdHx with x less than 1. While this property is common to many transition metals, palladium has a uniquely high absorption capacity and does not lose its ductility until x approaches 1. This property has been investigated in designing an efficient and safe hydrogen fuel storage medium, though palladium itself is currently prohibitively expensive for this purpose. The content of hydrogen in palladium can be linked to
magnetic susceptibility, which decreases with the increase of hydrogen and becomes zero for PdH0.62. At any higher ratio, the
solid solution becomes
diamagnetic. Palladium is used for purification of hydrogen on a laboratory but not industrial scale.
Medicine Palladium is used in small amounts (about 0.5%) in some alloys of
dental amalgam to decrease corrosion and increase the
metallic lustre of the final restoration. Palladium is also used in the production of
pacemakers.
Jewellery Palladium has been used as a
precious metal in jewellery since 1939 as an alternative to platinum in the alloys called "
white gold", where the naturally white color of palladium does not require
rhodium plating. Palladium, being much less dense than platinum, is similar to gold in that it can be beaten into
leaf as thin as 100 nm ( in). due to oxidation, making it more brittle and thus less suitable for use in jewellery; to prevent this, palladium intended for jewellery is heated under controlled conditions. Prior to 2004, the principal use of palladium in jewellery was the manufacture of white gold. Palladium is one of the three most popular alloying metals in white gold (
nickel and silver can also be used). Palladium-gold is more expensive than nickel-gold, but seldom causes allergic reactions (though certain cross-allergies with nickel may occur). When platinum became a strategic resource during World War II, many jewellery bands were made out of palladium. Palladium was little used in jewellery because of the technical difficulty of
casting. With the casting problem resolved the use of palladium in jewellery increased, originally because platinum increased in price whilst the price of palladium decreased. In early 2004, when gold and platinum prices rose steeply, China began fabricating volumes of palladium jewellery, consuming 37
tonnes in 2005. Subsequent changes in the relative price of platinum lowered demand for palladium to 17.4 tonnes in 2009. Demand for palladium as a catalyst has increased the price of palladium to about 50% higher than that of platinum in January 2019. In January 2010,
hallmarks for palladium were introduced by assay offices in the United Kingdom, and hallmarking became mandatory for all jewellery advertising pure or alloyed palladium. Articles can be marked as 500, 950, or 999 parts of palladium per thousand of the alloy.
Photography In the
platinotype printing process, photographers make fine-art black-and-white prints using platinum or palladium salts. Often used with platinum, palladium provides an alternative to silver. But palladium is more inert than the silver used in
silver bromide prints, so such photographs are better archived than conventional prints and convey details more clearly. == Effects on health ==