The fermi temperature , i believe, is the temp at which the conductivity of the metal in its liquid state peaks. Has something to do with polarity and ions maybe
Found this - - "We could further speculate on the electrochemical nature of this material. Consider the hydrogenated semiconductor BiH2I. With two tetrahedral holes per site, BiI may be a strong hydrogen absorber, if its tendency to oxidize to BiIO is overcome. The material may exhibit ionic conduction of hydrogen ions, in contrast to electronic conduction of Bipolarons, depending on the electrode material. The end result would be the electrolysis of water, or reversibly, the catalysis of hydrogen and oxygen. Isolation of this material from the environment may be one prerequisite for this behavior; i.e. - Platinum, Tungsten, Carbon or Quartz."
Don't completely understand what that means so if anybody in here does than could a tungsten salt work in place of the Adam's catalyst in the hydrogenation of MDP2P via methylamine and possibly nitromethane?
Also found this definition " WORK FUNCTION. -- The minimum energy required to remove an electron from the Fermi level of a material into field-free space. Work function is normally expressed in electron volts. " don't seem like that helps to much though. A fermi is also a measurement of length. Also known as a femtometer (1^-15). Enrico Fermi was a physicist who did some shit with radioactivity (first controlled nuclear reaction I think)
It also seems to deal with solid state lasers, super-conductors, surfaces, and compressed liquids.
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