The brick red is your (NH4)2PdCl6, ammonium hexachloropalladate in its +4 oxidation state and that is the start of your pyrolysis pathway for palladium. At about 350C it goes to palladite, the +2 oxidation state.
The way you're naming sounds like it’s complexed with NH3. Nope, it's actually an ammonia salt. Don’t even get me started with why it’s a salt not a complex and not vice versa…
I’ve been meaning to post this up for a while. I won’t mention Ru, Os, Ir, and Re unless y’all ask me to, since not many people deal with it. Same with some of the other weird compounds that you rarely ever see, like platinum oxide (sounds like an oxymoron doesn’t it
)To the CRC (my Hoke
):
The properties of Palladium, platinum, rhodium and their common salts:
Palladium
Pd-palladium, 106.42 g/mol, melts at 1554.9oC. Soluble in aqua regia, nitric acid, conc. sulfuric, and Cl2+ HCl to give a deeply yellow solution that appears brown.
(NH4)2PdCl6—ammonium hexachloropalladate (IV)—355.21 g/mol. Brick red hygroscopic crystals. Soluble in hot water, concentrated ammonia. Reduce to sponge with heat or hydrazine, Pd black with formic acid or borohydride.
PdCl2—palladium (II) chloride—177.33 g/mol. Ruby red hygroscopic crystals. Soluble in acetone, (m)ethanol, and water. Reduce with hydrogen, 500oC.
PdO—palladium (II) oxide -- 122.42 g/mol. Greenish black crystals. Insoluble in water, readily soluble in aqua regia. Palladium hydroxide is a hydrated form of this compound. Reduce with ammonium formate or heat til dissociation of the elements at 750oC.
Pd(NO3)2—palladium (II) nitrate—230.43 g/mol. Brown hygroscopic crystals. Slightly soluble in water, very soluble in dilute nitric acid. Reduce with pyrolysis.
Platinum
Pt—platinum, 195.08g/mol. Melts at 1768.4 oC. Soluble in hot aqua regia, practically nothing else. Gives a red orange solution.
(NH4)2PtCl6 – ammonium hexachloroplatinate (IV) – 443.87 g/mol. Orange-red cubic crystals. Slightly soluble in hot water, conc. ammonia, insoluble in ethanol. Reduce to sponge with heat or hydrazine, Pt black with formic acid or borohydride. Alkali metal analogues.
(NH4)2PtCl4—ammonium tetrachloroplatinate (II)—372.97 g/mol. Dark red crystals. Soluble in water. Reduce to sponge with heat.
H2PtCl6*6H2O—hexachloroplatinic acid hexahydrate—517.9g/mol. Brown-yellow hygroscopic crystals. Soluble in HCl, very much so in water and (m)ethanol.
Rhodium
Rh, rhodium 102.91 g/mol, melts at 1964 oC, really damn hot. Slightly soluble in aqua regia and fuming sulfuric acid. Best dissolved by fusion.
RhCl3—rhodium (III) chloride—209.264 g/mol. Red to chocolate brown crystals. Soluble in alkalis, strong acids; insoluble in water. Reduction with hydrogen at 500 oC gives clean Rh sponge.
Rh2(SO4)3—rhodium (III) sulfate—494.002 g/mol. Red-yellow solid, brown solution. Slightly soluble in water, more so with sulfuric acid. Decomposes to the oxide at 500 oC. Cement with merrilite zinc or magnesium turnings. Or plate, or reduce the oxide with hydrogen.
Rh4(CO)12--Rhodium [dodeca]carbonyl—747.747g/mol. Red crystals. Decomposes with water or heat to yield rhodium metal.