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  2. Nickel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel

    Coins still made with nickel alloys include one- and two-euro coins, 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, and $1 U.S. coins, [73] and 20p, 50p, £1, and £2 UK coins. From 2012 on the nickel-alloy used for 5p and 10p UK coins was replaced with nickel-plated steel. This ignited a public controversy regarding the problems of people with nickel allergy. [68]

  3. Nickel compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel_compounds

    A binary compound of nickel contains one other element. Substances that contain only nickel atoms are not actually compounds. In a noble gas matrix, nickel can form dimers, a molecule with two nickel atoms: Ni 2. [1] Ni 2 has a bonding energy of 2.07±0.01 eV. For Ni 2 + the bond energy is around 3.3 eV. Nickel dimers and other clusters can ...

  4. Mond process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mond_process

    Spheres of nickel made by the Mond process. The Mond process, sometimes known as the carbonyl process, is a technique created by Ludwig Mond in 1890, [1] to extract and purify nickel. The process was used commercially before the end of the 19th century, [2] and particularly by the International Nickel Company in the Sudbury Basin. [3]

  5. Organonickel chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organonickel_chemistry

    Organonickel chemistry is a branch of organometallic chemistry that deals with organic compounds featuring nickel-carbon bonds. [1] [2] They are used as a catalyst, as a building block in organic chemistry and in chemical vapor deposition. Organonickel compounds are also short-lived intermediates in organic reactions.

  6. Nickel titanium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel_titanium

    In an ordinary alloy, the constituents are randomly positioned in the crystal lattice; in an ordered intermetallic compound, the atoms (in this case, nickel and titanium) have very specific locations in the lattice. [13] The fact that nitinol is an intermetallic is largely responsible for the complexity in fabricating devices made from the alloy.

  7. Category:Nickel compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Nickel_compounds

    IARC Monograph "Nickel and Nickel compounds" National Pollutant Inventory - Nickel and compounds Fact Sheet; Subcategories. This category has the following 3 ...

  8. Oxonickelates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxonickelates

    Nickel forms a series of mixed oxide compounds which are commonly called nickelates. A nickelate is an anion containing nickel or a salt containing a nickelate anion, or a double compound containing nickel bound to oxygen and other elements. Nickel can be in different or even mixed oxidation states, ranging from +1, +2, +3 to +4.

  9. Iron–nickel alloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron–nickel_alloy

    The surfaces of these metallic compounds provide a complex electron environment for catalyzing chemical reactions. [4] In steel metallurgy, nickel is alloyed with iron since 1888 (date of Schneider et Cie's patent [5] on nickel steel based on Jean Werth's research [6]) to produce maraging steel and some low-alloy steels.