Yes Palladium is (according to the Periodic Table) in fact malleable meaning it can be hammered into sheet metal or other things
Palladium has a shiny, silvery-white appearance and is a relatively soft metal with a smooth texture. It is malleable and ductile, meaning it can be easily shaped and molded.
Palladium is the lightest of the platinum group and very malleable and ductile when pure. It resists oxidation at ordinary temperatures. It absorbs a considerable amount of hydrogen gas. It is appreciably volatile at high temperatures. At red heat it is converted to the oxide. A property unique to palladium is its ability to absorb and retain over 800 times its volume of hydrogen, which results in an expansion of several percent. Palladium dissolves anodically in warm acidic chloride solutions.
malleable
Palladium is marked 950PD.
Palladium is a metal.
Palladium is a paramagnetic metal.
Gold is extremely malleable.
Palladium(II) has a charge of +2
Palladium is a metal; it is a transition metal.
Palladium chloride can be made by dissolving palladium metal in aqua regia (a mixture of hydrochloric acid and nitric acid) to form palladium(II) chloride. The reaction involves the oxidation of palladium metal to palladium(II) ions by nitric acid.
no it is not malleable
There are 2286 seats at the palladium