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The British one pound coin weighs 9.5 grams.
A bimetallic 2 Euro coin (not to be confused with a copper 2 Euro Cent coin) weighs 8.50 grams.
12.0 gram copper coin (1 mole Cu/63.55 grams)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole Cu) = 1.14 X 10^23 atoms of copper
The Louisiana Purchase Exposition gold coin weighed 1.672 grams and consisted of 90% gold and 10% copper. This means there is 1.5048 grams of gold in the coin or 0.04837 troy ounces.
The copper-nickel coins weigh 22.68 grams. The 40% silver coins weigh 24.59 grams.
You need to be a lot more specific. There are coin catalogues of thousands of pages containing that sort of information.
US Pennies were made of 95% copper (with the exception of the 1943 steel cent) from 1864-1982. Midway through 1982, the cent switched to copper plated zinc. So any penny dated 1983-present is just copper plated zinc. However a coin dated 1982 could either be 95% copper or copper plated zinc. A copper coin should weigh about 3.11 grams while the zinc pennies are lighter at about 2.5 grams.
It depends on the type of coin. The following list of weights applies to US silver coins minted before 1965 (when composition was switched to copper and nickel). Dime: 2.5 grams Quarter: 6.25 grams Half dollar: 12.5 grams Dollar: 26.73 grams
It's 90% silver with 10% copper. The coin's total weight is 26.73 grams.
The percentage of any metal in a coin would depend entirely on the coin and the country it came from. An Australian 1962 "copper" coin (bronze) contains 97% copper. An Australian 1962 "silver" coin (cupro-nickel) contains 40% copper. A British 1962 "copper" coin (bronze) contains 97% copper. A British 1962 "silver" coin (cupro-nickel) contains 75% copper. An American 1962 "copper" (bronze) 1¢ coin contains 95% copper An American 1962 "nickel" 5¢ coin is actually 75% copper An American 1962 silver coin is 10% copper, with the rest silver.
The 2006 quarter is composed of a core of pure copper with outer layers of copper-nickel. If there was truly no copper then there would be no coin. If the usual copper line is missing from the edge of the quarter it is not because there is no copper in it but because as the blank quarter was stamped out of the sheet of metal, the outer layers containing the nickel were "smeared" over the edge of the blank quarter by the cutting die and concealing the customary copper band. Scraping the edge of the coin would reveal the copper.