As of 16 Feb 2018, the melt value of one US nickel is 4.4 cents.
Nickel is a metal and has 28 electrons when not ionized.
No, nickel silver and sterling silver are not the same value. Sterling silver is a precious metal composed of 92.5% silver, while nickel silver is an alloy of nickel, copper, and zinc that does not contain any silver. Sterling silver is typically more valuable than nickel silver.
Cu(s)
A nickel with copper infused is still worth 5 cents, as the metal composition of the coin is what determines its value. The added copper may change the appearance of the coin but not its monetary worth.
Not a whole lot. Nickel silver contains no silver but only contains base metals, so if you are scrapping a lot of it (several pounds) it may contain scrap value, though it would cost quite a bit to have it refined.
The melt value of something is the value of the metal itself. For example, a 1964 nickel has a melt value of 5 cents because 1.8 cents worth of nickel and 2.7 cents of copper.
That's a Canadian centennial nickel from 1967. It's currently worth about 7 cents for the metal content.
It's worth about 7 cents for the metal content.
The nickel, named for the metal that makes up part of its composition.
Nickel nimh stands for "NIckel Metal Hydride"
no nickel is an element, a metal
Nickel is a metal and has 28 electrons when not ionized.
It is in common circulation, it has no precious metal content and is worth 5 cents.
the value of the nickel is 5 cent
No, nickel silver and sterling silver are not the same value. Sterling silver is a precious metal composed of 92.5% silver, while nickel silver is an alloy of nickel, copper, and zinc that does not contain any silver. Sterling silver is typically more valuable than nickel silver.
yesYes
Nickel is a Transition Metal