It's primarily used for alloying.
used for nickel platting and other products that need a coating
Two quarters and another coin is a nickel. Only one of them has to not be a nickel, so that would be the quarter.
nickel-it can be found in your beans, forks, and magnets....oh yeah, rocket engines too.
Well, darling, when you mix nickel and iodine, you get nickel iodide. It's as simple as that. No need to complicate things, honey. Just mix those two elements together and voila, nickel iodide is born.
move the penny on the far right over to the other side on the left and then move the 1st nickel over to the right...hence penny penny penny nickel nickel
Yes, a 1946 nickel does contain silver. Nickels minted from 1942-1945 were made with a composition of 35% silver and 56% copper, due to the wartime need for nickel. After 1945, nickel composition returned to the standard 75% copper and 25% nickel.
It costs a nickel, which is $5. If you need to ask, you shouldn't be buying it. And perhaps you shouldn't be buying it anyway.
The metal nickel is named the same in French: "le nickel" (masculine noun). The English sense "five-cents coin" has no use in France, and would probably need to be clarified except for French-speaking Canadians. Nickel is also used in informal French as an adjective, meaning "spick and span".
To determine the number of moles in nickel acetate, you need to know the mass of nickel acetate. Once you know the mass, you can use the formula: moles = mass / molar mass. The molar mass of nickel acetate is 176.7 g/mol.
You need to look at the coin again. The first Indian Head nickel was struck in 1913. Post new question.
If you mean the chemical element nickel, all you need is some nickel-containing ore and the means to refine it; as an element, nickel itself cannot be altered except through nuclear fusion. If you're referring to a coin containing nickel, such as the U.S. five-cent piece, you need an alloy that is 75% copper (and only 25% nickel!) and a coin press. (In fact, the Canadian version has even less nickel than that: a plating that amounts to 2% of the weight of the coin, over a core that's mostly steel with a bit of copper.) Be aware, of course, that attempting to make and use your own money is considered counterfeiting, and is illegal in almost all parts of the world.
If a dime is worth 10, and a nickel is worth 5, then you only need SEVEN coins ! Six dimes and one nickel is all you need.