Nickel silver is a metal alloy of copper with nickel and often but not always zinc. It is named for its silvery appearance, and contains no elemental silver. Other common names for this alloy are German Silver, Paktong, New Silver and Alpacca (or Alpaca).
Some nickel silver alloys, especially those containing high proportions of zinc, are stainless.
Nickel-silver alloys are commonly named by listing their percentages of copper and nickel, thus "Nickel Silver 55-18" would contain 55% copper, 18% nickel, and 27% other elements, most probably entirely zinc. A two-element alloy may be named for its nickel content alone, thus NS-12 is 88% copper and 12% nickel.
It is used in zippers, costume jewellery, for making musical instruments (e.g., cymbals), and is valuable for electrically-powered model railway layouts as its oxide is conductive.
It is widely used in the production of coins (e.g. GDR marks, Portuguese escudo).
Its industrial and technical uses include marine fittings and plumbing fixtures for its corrosion resistance, and heating coils for its high electrical resistance.
Nickel silver became widely used after 1840 with the development of electoplating, as it formed an ideal strong and bright substrate for the plating process. It was also used unplated in applications such as cheaper grades of cutlery.
Nickel | Copper alloys | Silver
Алпака | Nysølv | Neusilber | Alpaca (aleación) | Maillechort | 양은 | Alpaca (legering) | 洋白 | Nowe srebro | Alpaca (liga metálica) | Nysilver
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