News, Articles and Information
PALLADIUM
Palladium is a soft silver-white metal that resembles platinum. It is the least
dense and has the lowest melting point of the platinum group metals.
This metal also does not react with oxygen at normal temperatures (and thus does
not tarnish in air). The largest use of palladium today is in catalytic
converters. Much research is in progress to discover ways to replace the much
more expensive platinum with palladium in this application.
Palladium is one of the two metals which can be alloyed with gold to produce
White gold. (Nickel can also be used.) Similar to gold, palladium can be beaten
into a thin leaf form as thin as 100 nm (1/250,000 in). Discovered by William
Hyde Wollaston in 1803 was named after the asteroid Pallas, which was
discovered two years earlier.
Palladium is found as a free metal in placer deposits of the Ural Mountains,
Australia, Ethiopia, South and North America, however, it is commercially
produced from nickel-copper deposits found in South Africa and Ontario. Of
late, an increasing number of white precious metal alloys have been introduced
into the jewelry marketplace in answer to industry cries for a true white
counterpart to the ever-popular yellow gold. The search has been on for a
workable white alloy that stays white, is hypoallergenic and priced more
agreeably than platinum.
Palladium was first used for jewelry when platinum was declared a strategic
metal and reserved for military use in 1939. Palladium alloys for jewelry
typically contain 95% palladium and about 5% ruthenium and have trace amounts
of other metals proprietary to their developers. These palladium alloys are
white, noble, malleable, lightweight, hypoallergenic, easy to finish and
polish, furthermore they do not require rhodium plating, and have desirable,
platinum-like setting and forming characteristics.
The specific gravity of palladium is close to that of 14k white gold and nearly
half the weight by volume of platinum. The lightness of palladium alloys and
pricing considerations make them prime candidates for use in fashionable,
affordable and classically influenced jewelry designs. Palladium will stay
white, never requiring the “renewed whitening” via rhodium plating white gold
does.
Physical Properties of Palladium
Melting point: 1828 degrees K
Symbol: Pd
Crystal System: Face-centered cubic crystal
Hardness: 4.75 Mohs'
Cleavage: None
Fracture: None
Specific Gravity: 10.38
Color: grayish white metallic
Luster: bright, shiny
|