Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name.
Start the Platinum single article (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Platinum_single&action=edit).
Search for Platinum single in other articles.
Look for Platinum single in Wiktionary, our sister dictionary project.
Look for Platinum single in the Commons, our repository for free images, music, sound, and video.
Look for pages linking to this page
If you have created this page in the past few minutes and it has not yet appeared, it may not be visible due to a delay in updating the database. Try purge (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Platinum_single&action=purge), otherwise please wait and check again later before attempting to recreate the page.
If you created an article under this title previously, it may have been deleted. See candidates for speedy deletion for possible reasons.
Platinum, together with palladium and rhodium, are primary elements in autocalysts that control vehicle exhausts emissions of hydro-carbons, carbon monoxide, oxides of nitrogen and particulate.
Platinum is used in fertilizers and explosives as a gauze for the catalytic conversion of ammonia to nitric acid.
Platinum is used as a refining catalyst in the petroleum industry.
Platinum, platinum alloys, and iridium are used as crucible materials for the growth of single crystals, especially oxides.
The chemical industry uses a significant amount of either platinum or a platinum-rhodium alloy catalyst in the form of gauze to catalyze the partial oxidation of ammonia to yield nitric oxide, which is the raw material for fertilizers, explosives, and nitric acid.
Platinum supported catalysts are used in the refining of crude oil, reforming, and other processes used in the production of high-octane gasoline and aromatic compounds for the petrochemical industry.