Hi. I am a metal worker of 42 years professional experience. There are several alloys of nickel silver. I believe all contain copper, nickel and zinc. Some contain cadmium and are pretty toxic to melt. Cadmium, among other things, causes brittle bone disease. Melting points start around 1725 F. and go up from there depending upong the ratios of the different metals. Make sure you know the alloy you are melting and whether or not it contains cadmium, and if you decide to deal with cadmium make sure you know how to do it safely. If you know the brand the alloy is, you can get a material safety and handling sheet that will tell you the contents of the metal and the melting point for that specific alloy
1455 degrees C (2651 degrees F)
1,455 Celsius
1001 °C
hydrate loses water
1,453 C
1453°C
What family does the element nickel belong in?
1728 k ​(1455 °c, ​2651 °f)
Melting Point: 1453.0 °C (1726.15 K, 2647.4 °F)Boiling Point: 2732.0 °C (3005.15 K, 4949.6 °F)
The boiling point of magnesium is at 1 090 0C.
melting point
Yes, the melting point of nickel is 1728 kelvin.
What family does the element nickel belong in?
276 degrees Fahrenheit.
1728 k ​(1455 °c, ​2651 °f)
Melting Point: 1453.0 °C (1726.15 K, 2647.4 °F)Boiling Point: 2732.0 °C (3005.15 K, 4949.6 °F)
A: Nickel has a very low point melting value which for that fact makes undesirable as conductor.
Nickel's atomic number is 28. It's atomic weight on the periodic table is 58.6934. It's boiling point is 2913 oC. It's melting point is 1455 oC. Mass number varies with the individual isotopes.
The boiling point of magnesium is at 1 090 0C.
nickel's melting point is 1728K,1455°C, 2651 °F Boiling point is 3186 K, 2913 °C, 5275 °F
This is the melting point.
one thousand four hundred degrees Fahrenheit or 1,400 degrees F.
If the ice is right at or close to the melting point temperature at ambient pressure, the pressure of a nickel will cause ice to melt and allow the nickel to penetrate into the ice, displacing the melted water as it goes.