Nickel-metal hydride batteries are a type of rechargeable battery with an electrochemistry similar to nickel cadmium batteries, but the eliminate the toxic cadmium metal.
The older nickel cadmium battery uses nickel oxide hydroxide and metallic cadmium as electrodes, while the newer nickel-metal hydride battery keeps the nickel oxide hydroxide electrode it uses a complex alloy that readily absorbs hydrogen atoms forming a metal hydride, it is the absorbed hydrogen within this hydride that actually functions as the active electrode in the battery. In addition to eliminating the toxic cadmium (making recycling or disposal easier and cheaper) this change also provides other advantages: higher battery capacity, no memory effect, etc.
Some of the different alloys used in the metal hydride electrode are:
calcium hydride
sodium hydride
Phosphorous Hydride = PH3
A hydride is hydrogen anion (a negative ion), written as H- A few examples of hydrides are Sodium hydride, NaH Calcium hydride, CaH2 Sodium borohydride, NaBH4 Lithium aluminum hydride, LiAlH4
The formula for the hydride formed with antimony is SbH3, which is known as antimony hydride or stibine.
No- it is an alkali metal hydride.
Sodium hydride is an ionic compound.
The compound formula for silver hydride is AgH.
The formula of the hydride formed with magnesium is MgH2.
The chemical symbol for hydride is H-.
The formula for aluminum hydride is AlH3.
No. Ammonia is the main hydride of nitrogen, which is a nonmetal.