DocumentCode :
841670
Title :
Dissolution of Palladium and Platinum from Automotive Catalysts
Author :
Hill, Robert F. ; Potter, Noel M.
Author_Institution :
Analytical Chemistry Department General Motors Research Laboratories Warren, Michigan 48090
Volume :
26
Issue :
5
fYear :
1979
Firstpage :
4704
Lastpage :
4706
Abstract :
Automotive exhaust gas catalysts contain palladium and platinum as the active material on an alumina substrate. Experiments were conducted to determine the amount of palladium and platinum that could be leached from fresh and aged automotive catalysts under various conditions. The conditions included soaking the catalyst samples in rain water to simulate environmental leaching from discarded catalysts and in dilute hydrochloric acid to simulate the dissolution of noble metals from swallowed catalysts. To obtain the necessary sensitivity for measuring microgram quantities of these noble metals in the leachates, radiochemical techniques were used. The results indicate that only very small amounts of noble metals are leached from fresh catalysts; the extent of dissolution depends upon catalyst pretreatment and the leaching solution. The dissolution of noble metals from aged catalysts (80,000-km vehicle tests) is one tenth that of fresh catalysts.
Keywords :
Aging; Automotive engineering; Exhaust systems; Leaching; Palladium; Platinum; Solvents; Testing; Toxicology; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.1979.4330201
Filename :
4330201
Link To Document :
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