Palladium is a highly valuable metal in automobile, chemical, and pharmaceutical industries. The metal is generally quantified by atomic absorption spectrometry or inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. These techniques are tedious and require expensive instruments that are operated mostly off site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCatalysis-based signal amplification makes optical assays highly sensitive and widely useful in chemical and biochemical research. However, assays must be fine-tuned to avoid signal saturation, substrate depletion and nonlinear performance. Furthermore, once stopped, such assays cannot be restarted, limiting the dynamic range to two orders of magnitude with respect to analyte concentrations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeither palladium nor platinum is an endogenous biological metal. Imaging palladium in biological samples, however, is becoming increasingly important because bioorthogonal organometallic chemistry involves palladium catalysis. In addition to being an imaging target, palladium has been used to fluorometrically image biomolecules.
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