2 dollars a pound
or 46 cents a gram
2 dollars a pound
about 10,000 pounds per gram
5 cents 5 cents
6.7/100g
iron has no carbon in it if it is pure iron
In late 2008, bulk potassium was about $ 40 USD per pound.The price for the salt "potassium chloride" was only about 1% of that price, but sharply higher in 2009 (around $ 10 USD per pound in bulk).
$3.07=100g(pure) $0.32=100g(bulk)
About $10000 if is an pure red Beryl, if not it could cost less than that.
Silicon is the second most abundant element in the Earth's crust, and the eighth most abundant in the Universe. So you can get as much of it as you want for totally free. Just go down to the beach and scoop up a few handfuls of "silicon-dioxide" ... sand. Any cost for silicon is the cost of purifying the raw stuff. I found the following on-line: Cost, bulk: $0.14 per 100g Cost, industrial pure: $5.40 per 100g Cost, electronic pure: $276 per 100g
about 100£ on the international market
Titanium alloys cost about $3-$4 per pound. This is in contrast with pure titanium, which can range from $18 to $22 per pound.
Iron symbol on the periodic table is Fe. The cost of pure iron is 7 dollars and 20 cents per 100 grams.
iron has no carbon in it if it is pure iron
If it is pure iron then by definition there is no carbon or anything else present in it, just iron.
the cost of pure aluminum is around 12000 dollars per pound
Pure Iron is called Pure iron.
Iron's melting point is 1538 °C (2800 °F or 1811 K) for pure metal (powderish or not)
A quick google search gave me a Shanghai price in May 2010 of $US 29 per pound, for 99% metal.
Iron is a pure metal.
Pure iron is homogeneous.
It is worth $8,121.02.