yes it can be .nickel has magnetic properties and with electro magnetism it can be recycled.
There are nickel-base superalloys and titanium-base alloys that are used for similar applications, usually in gas turbines. The two types of alloys are quite distinct, but may be used nearly interchangeably for certain applications. I hope this clears any confusion you may have.
Nickel allergies can pose a problem when searching for the perfect wedding band, as even high-carat gold can include nickel in the alloy mix. Titanium and platinum rings are both nickel free. For a less expensive ring, modern silver alloys do not contain nickel.
Titanium is used to make alloys. These alloys are used to make vehicle parts.
L. G. Ripley has written: 'The bromination of titanium, thorium, and titanium-thorium and titanium-thoria alloys' -- subject(s): Bromination, Thorium alloys, Titanium alloys
Pedro N. Sanchez has written: 'Titanium alloys' -- subject(s): Titanium alloys
Classification of non-ferrous alloys is typically based on their primary alloying elements. Common categories include aluminum alloys, copper alloys, magnesium alloys, and titanium alloys, each with specific properties and applications. Non-ferrous alloys are distinguished from ferrous alloys by the absence of iron as the primary constituent in the alloy composition.
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Iron alloys are hardened by carbon, Manganese or Molybdenum, Chromium, Titanium, Nickel, Boron, Cobalt
Flexon glasses are a titanium alloy like Nickel-Titanium. These are shape memory alloys that have the ability to transform between martensite and austenite phases when a load or temperature change is applied. they can be forged, extruded, or vacuum melted.
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John Laurence Everhart has written: 'Engineering properties of nickel and nickel alloys' -- subject(s): Nickel, Nickel alloys
Yes, Nickel can be recycled.