Palladium Hydride

Palladium hydride is metallic palladium that contains a substantial quantity of hydrogen within its crystal lattice. At room temperature and atmospheric pressure, palladium can absorb up to 900 times its own volume of hydrogen. This remarkable property allows palladium to store substantial quantities of hydrogen in a safe manner, and may also allow for unusual chemical reactions to be performed. The details of how this absorption process works are poorly understood. Better understanding of what happens at the molecular level, such as phase changes that occur as hydrogen fills the metal and the effect of defects in the material, could give clues to designing metal hydrides that perform better. Palladium electrodes have been used in some cold fusion experiments, under the hypothesis that the hydrogen could be "squeezed" between the palladium atoms to help them fuse at lower temperatures than would otherwise be required. No cold fusion experiments have achieved conclusive positive results, however, and the theoretical ability of palladium to accomplish this is in dispute.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
elliptical
walt disney's dumbo: happy to help
walt disney's dumbo the circus baby
walt disney's dumbo book of opposites
oncale v. sundowner offshore services
disney's the lion king
sea hawk
phil lamarr
guangxu emperor
tongzhi emperor
swara
xianfeng emperor
conurbation
riot grrrl
daoguang emperor
jiaqing emperor
qianlong emperor
yongzheng emperor
brain in a vat
lognan
hong taiji
nurhaci
chariot racing
temporal cold war
pierrot lunaire
sid and nancy
ysm
alfred watkins
anne beverly
calamity james
chloe webb
micromouse
jorvik
1999 rugby union world cup
antony armstrong jones, 1st earl of snowdon
robert the magnificent
o. g. s. crawford
earl of snowdon
lead lag effect
counties in finland
mandarin phonetic symbols ii
peter fluck
roger law
david stoten