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Nickel silver

Nickel silver, maillechort, German silver,[1] argentan,[1] new silver,[1] nickel brass,[2] albata,[3] or alpacca[4] is a copper alloy with nickel and often zinc. The usual formulation is 60% copper, 20% nickel and 20% zinc.[5] Nickel silver does not contain the element silver. It is named for its silvery appearance, which can make it attractive as a cheaper and more durable substitute. It is also well suited for being plated with silver.

"German silver" hair comb by Bruce Caesar

A naturally occurring ore composition in China was smelted into the alloy known as paktong or báitóng (白銅) ("white copper" or cupronickel). The name "German Silver" refers to the artificial recreation of the natural ore composition by German metallurgists.[6][7][8] All modern, commercially important, nickel silvers (such as those standardized under ASTM B122) contain significant amounts of zinc and are sometimes considered a subset of brass.[9]

History

 
Tracing a cross onto a piece of crude nickel silver at a workshop in San Miguel Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico

Nickel silver was first used in China, where it was smelted from readily available unprocessed ore.[8][10] During the Qing dynasty, it was "smuggled into various parts of the East Indies", despite a government ban on the export of nickel silver.[11] It became known in the West from imported wares called baitong (Mandarin) or paktong (Cantonese) (白 銅, literally "white copper"), for which the silvery metal colour was used to imitate sterling silver. According to Berthold Laufer, it was identical to khar sini, one of the seven metals recognized by Jābir ibn Hayyān.[12]

In Europe, consequently, it was at first called paktong, which is about the way baitong is pronounced in the Cantonese dialect.[13] The earliest European mention of paktong occurs in the year 1597. From then until the end of the eighteenth century there are references to it as having been exported from Canton to Europe.[13]

German artificial recreation of the natural paktong ore composition, however, began to appear from about 1750 onward.[13] In 1770, the Suhl metalworks were able to produce a similar alloy.[14] In 1823, a German competition was held to perfect the production process: the goal was to develop an alloy that possessed the closest visual similarity to silver. The brothers Henniger in Berlin and Ernst August Geitner in Schneeberg independently achieved this goal. The manufacturer Berndorf named the trademark brand Alpacca, which became widely known in northern Europe for nickel silver. In 1830, the German process of manufacture was introduced into England, while exports of paktong from China gradually stopped. In 1832, a form of German silver was also developed in Birmingham, England.[15]

After the modern process for the production of electroplated nickel silver was patented in 1840 by George Richards Elkington and his cousin Henry Elkington in Birmingham, the development of electroplating caused nickel silver to become widely used. It formed an ideal, strong and bright substrate for the plating process. It was also used unplated in applications such as cutlery.[citation needed]

Uses

 
Nickel silver pieces from the Ruth Cortez Rodriguez workshop in Mexico

Nickel silver first became popular as a base metal for silver-plated cutlery and other silverware, notably the electroplated wares called EPNS (electroplated nickel silver). It is used in zippers, costume jewelry, for making musical instruments (e.g., flutes, clarinets), and is preferred for the track in electric model railway layouts, as its oxide is conductive[citation needed]. Better quality keys and lock cylinder pins are made of nickel silver for durability under heavy use. The alloy has been widely used in the production of coins (e.g. Portuguese escudo and the former GDR marks). Its industrial and technical uses include marine fittings and plumbing fixtures for its corrosion resistance, and heating coils for its high electrical resistance.

In the nineteenth century, particularly after 1868, North American Plains Indian metalsmiths were able to easily acquire sheets of German silver. They used them to cut, stamp, and cold hammer a wide range of accessories and also horse gear. Presently, Plains metalsmiths use German silver for pendants, pectorals, bracelets, armbands, hair plates, conchas (oval decorative plates for belts), earrings, belt buckles, necktie slides, stickpins, dush-tuhs, and tiaras.[16] Nickel silver is the metal of choice among contemporary Kiowa and Pawnee in Oklahoma. Many of the metal fittings on modern higher-end equine harness and tack are of nickel silver.

Early in the twentieth century, German silver was used by automobile manufacturers before the advent of steel sheet metal. For example, the famous Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost of 1907. After about 1920, it became widely used for pocketknife bolsters, due to its machinability and corrosion resistance. Prior to this, the most common metal was iron.

 
19th century banjos used German silver rims over wood for tonal quality and appearance

Musical instruments, including the flute, saxophone, trumpet, and French horn, can be made of nickel silver. Many professional-level French horns are entirely made of nickel silver.[17] Some saxophone manufacturers, such as Keilwerth,[18][19] offer saxophones made of nickel silver (Shadow model); these are far rarer than traditional lacquered brass saxophones. Student-level flutes and piccolos are also made of silver-plated nickel silver,[20] although upper-level models are likely to use sterling silver.[21] Nickel silver produces a bright and powerful sound quality; an additional benefit is that the metal is harder and more corrosion resistant than brass.[22] Because of its hardness, it is used for most clarinet, flute, oboe and similar wind instrument keys, normally silver-plated. It is used to produce the tubes (called staples) onto which oboe reeds are tied.

Many parts of brass instruments are made of nickel silver, such as tubes, braces or valve mechanism. Trombone slides of many manufacturers offer a lightweight nickel silver (LT slide) option for faster slide action and weight balance.[23] The material was used in the construction of the National tricone resophonic guitar. The frets of guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and related string instruments are typically nickel silver. Nickel silver is sometimes used as ornamentation on the great highland bagpipe.

 
Willem Lenssinck, Formula 1 Racing Horse

Nickel silver is also used in artworks. The Dutch sculptor Willem Lenssinck has made several pieces from German silver. Outdoors art made from this material easily withstands all kinds of weather.

Fraudulent uses

Counterfeiters have used nickel silver to produce coins and medallions purporting to be silver rounds, generally in an attempt to trick unsuspecting buyers into paying prices based on the spot price of silver. The metal has also been used to produce counterfeit Morgan dollars.[citation needed]

Nickel silver fraud has included the production of replica bullion bars, marked "nickel silver" or "German silver", in weights of one troy ounce (31 g). They are sold without notification that they contain no elemental silver.[citation needed]

Toxicity

According to the Merck Manual, prolonged contact of copper alloys with acidic food or beverages (including boiling milk) can leach out the copper and cause toxicity.[24] Long-term, low doses can lead to cirrhosis. It is also the case that many people have allergic reactions to nickel, causing a weeping rash that will not heal as long as the metal is in contact with the skin.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Principles of Metallurgy. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-4400-5699-4.
  2. ^ Gayle, Margot; Look, David W; Waite, John G (April 1993). Metals in America's Historic Buildings: Uses and Preservation Treatments, Pt. 1, A Historical Survey of Metals, Pt. 2, Deterioration and Methods of Preserving Metals. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-16-061655-6.
  3. ^ Oxford English Dictionary
  4. ^ Marks of Berndorf Metalware Factory in Austria – Marks of Alpacca and Alpacca-Silver II Products: an article for ASCAS – Association of Small Collectors of Antique Silver website. Ascasonline.org. Retrieved on 2013-12-19.
  5. ^ Tim McCreight, The Complete Metalsmith.
  6. ^ Samuel J. Rosenberg. Nickel and its alloys. Vol. Monograph, 106. National Bureau of Standards. p. 8.6.
  7. ^ Keith Pinn, Paktong: The Chinese Alloy in Europe
  8. ^ a b Joseph Needham, Ling Wang, Gwei-Djen Lu, Tsuen-hsuin Tsien, Dieter Kuhn, Peter J Golas, Science and civilisation in China: Cambridge University Press: 1974, ISBN 0-521-08571-3, pp. 237–250
  9. ^ Nickel Silver – retrieved 19 April 2010.
  10. ^ Oberg, Erik; Jones, Franklin Day (1917). Machinery's Encyclopedia. The Industrial Press ; [etc., etc.] p. 412. The alloy came originally from China, where its composition is said to have been known
  11. ^ Dwight Dana, James (1869). Manual of Mineralogy. p. 265. smuggled into various parts of the East Indies... and is not allowed to be carried out of the empire
  12. ^ Holmyard, E. J. (1957). Alchemy, p. 80. New York: Dover.
  13. ^ a b c Derk Bodde, "China's Gifts to the West". Columbia University.
  14. ^ Neumann, Bernhard (1904). Die Metalle: Geschichte, Vorkommen und Gewinnung, nebst ausführlicher Produktions- und Preis-Statistik. Vom "Verein zur Beförderung des Gewerbefleisses" preisgekrönte Arbeit. p. 327. ISBN 9785877316324.
  15. ^ Neumann, B. (1903). "Die Anfänge der Argentan- (Neusilber)-Industrie und der technischen Nickelerzeugung". Zeitschrift für Angewandte Chemie. 16 (10): 225. Bibcode:1903AngCh..16..225N. doi:10.1002/ange.19030161004.
  16. ^ Dubin, Lois Sherr. North American Indian Jewelry and Adornment: From Prehistory to the Present. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1999. ISBN 0-8109-3689-5., pp. 290–293.
  17. ^ [1] 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ [2][dead link]
  19. ^ [3] 4 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Quantz505 – Pearl Flute Worldwide 7 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Pearlflute.com. Retrieved on 2013-12-19.
  21. ^ Elegante – Pearl Flute Worldwide 7 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Pearlflute.com. Retrieved on 2013-12-19.
  22. ^ [4] 6 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Bach > Professional Bb Tenor Trombones > Viewing Model LT16M 16 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Bachbrass.com. Retrieved on 2013-12-19.
  24. ^ Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, 17th ed., p. 56

External links

nickel, silver, animal, alpaca, maillechort, german, silver, argentan, silver, nickel, brass, albata, alpacca, copper, alloy, with, nickel, often, zinc, usual, formulation, copper, nickel, zinc, does, contain, element, silver, named, silvery, appearance, which. For the animal see Alpaca Nickel silver maillechort German silver 1 argentan 1 new silver 1 nickel brass 2 albata 3 or alpacca 4 is a copper alloy with nickel and often zinc The usual formulation is 60 copper 20 nickel and 20 zinc 5 Nickel silver does not contain the element silver It is named for its silvery appearance which can make it attractive as a cheaper and more durable substitute It is also well suited for being plated with silver German silver hair comb by Bruce CaesarA naturally occurring ore composition in China was smelted into the alloy known as paktong or baitong 白銅 white copper or cupronickel The name German Silver refers to the artificial recreation of the natural ore composition by German metallurgists 6 7 8 All modern commercially important nickel silvers such as those standardized under ASTM B122 contain significant amounts of zinc and are sometimes considered a subset of brass 9 Contents 1 History 2 Uses 3 Fraudulent uses 4 Toxicity 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit Tracing a cross onto a piece of crude nickel silver at a workshop in San Miguel Allende Guanajuato MexicoNickel silver was first used in China where it was smelted from readily available unprocessed ore 8 10 During the Qing dynasty it was smuggled into various parts of the East Indies despite a government ban on the export of nickel silver 11 It became known in the West from imported wares called baitong Mandarin or paktong Cantonese 白 銅 literally white copper for which the silvery metal colour was used to imitate sterling silver According to Berthold Laufer it was identical to khar sini one of the seven metals recognized by Jabir ibn Hayyan 12 In Europe consequently it was at first called paktong which is about the way baitong is pronounced in the Cantonese dialect 13 The earliest European mention of paktong occurs in the year 1597 From then until the end of the eighteenth century there are references to it as having been exported from Canton to Europe 13 German artificial recreation of the natural paktong ore composition however began to appear from about 1750 onward 13 In 1770 the Suhl metalworks were able to produce a similar alloy 14 In 1823 a German competition was held to perfect the production process the goal was to develop an alloy that possessed the closest visual similarity to silver The brothers Henniger in Berlin and Ernst August Geitner in Schneeberg independently achieved this goal The manufacturer Berndorf named the trademark brand Alpacca which became widely known in northern Europe for nickel silver In 1830 the German process of manufacture was introduced into England while exports of paktong from China gradually stopped In 1832 a form of German silver was also developed in Birmingham England 15 After the modern process for the production of electroplated nickel silver was patented in 1840 by George Richards Elkington and his cousin Henry Elkington in Birmingham the development of electroplating caused nickel silver to become widely used It formed an ideal strong and bright substrate for the plating process It was also used unplated in applications such as cutlery citation needed Uses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nickel silver news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nickel silver pieces from the Ruth Cortez Rodriguez workshop in MexicoNickel silver first became popular as a base metal for silver plated cutlery and other silverware notably the electroplated wares called EPNS electroplated nickel silver It is used in zippers costume jewelry for making musical instruments e g flutes clarinets and is preferred for the track in electric model railway layouts as its oxide is conductive citation needed Better quality keys and lock cylinder pins are made of nickel silver for durability under heavy use The alloy has been widely used in the production of coins e g Portuguese escudo and the former GDR marks Its industrial and technical uses include marine fittings and plumbing fixtures for its corrosion resistance and heating coils for its high electrical resistance In the nineteenth century particularly after 1868 North American Plains Indian metalsmiths were able to easily acquire sheets of German silver They used them to cut stamp and cold hammer a wide range of accessories and also horse gear Presently Plains metalsmiths use German silver for pendants pectorals bracelets armbands hair plates conchas oval decorative plates for belts earrings belt buckles necktie slides stickpins dush tuhs and tiaras 16 Nickel silver is the metal of choice among contemporary Kiowa and Pawnee in Oklahoma Many of the metal fittings on modern higher end equine harness and tack are of nickel silver Early in the twentieth century German silver was used by automobile manufacturers before the advent of steel sheet metal For example the famous Rolls Royce Silver Ghost of 1907 After about 1920 it became widely used for pocketknife bolsters due to its machinability and corrosion resistance Prior to this the most common metal was iron 19th century banjos used German silver rims over wood for tonal quality and appearanceMusical instruments including the flute saxophone trumpet and French horn can be made of nickel silver Many professional level French horns are entirely made of nickel silver 17 Some saxophone manufacturers such as Keilwerth 18 19 offer saxophones made of nickel silver Shadow model these are far rarer than traditional lacquered brass saxophones Student level flutes and piccolos are also made of silver plated nickel silver 20 although upper level models are likely to use sterling silver 21 Nickel silver produces a bright and powerful sound quality an additional benefit is that the metal is harder and more corrosion resistant than brass 22 Because of its hardness it is used for most clarinet flute oboe and similar wind instrument keys normally silver plated It is used to produce the tubes called staples onto which oboe reeds are tied Many parts of brass instruments are made of nickel silver such as tubes braces or valve mechanism Trombone slides of many manufacturers offer a lightweight nickel silver LT slide option for faster slide action and weight balance 23 The material was used in the construction of the National tricone resophonic guitar The frets of guitar mandolin banjo bass and related string instruments are typically nickel silver Nickel silver is sometimes used as ornamentation on the great highland bagpipe Willem Lenssinck Formula 1 Racing HorseNickel silver is also used in artworks The Dutch sculptor Willem Lenssinck has made several pieces from German silver Outdoors art made from this material easily withstands all kinds of weather Fraudulent uses EditCounterfeiters have used nickel silver to produce coins and medallions purporting to be silver rounds generally in an attempt to trick unsuspecting buyers into paying prices based on the spot price of silver The metal has also been used to produce counterfeit Morgan dollars citation needed Nickel silver fraud has included the production of replica bullion bars marked nickel silver or German silver in weights of one troy ounce 31 g They are sold without notification that they contain no elemental silver citation needed Toxicity EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2009 According to the Merck Manual prolonged contact of copper alloys with acidic food or beverages including boiling milk can leach out the copper and cause toxicity 24 Long term low doses can lead to cirrhosis It is also the case that many people have allergic reactions to nickel causing a weeping rash that will not heal as long as the metal is in contact with the skin citation needed See also EditArgentium sterling silver sounds similar to argentan but is a very different precious white metal Argentium Sterling 92 5 silver 7 5 copper and germanium which remains untarnished much longer than plain Sterling Britannia silver 95 833 silver the rest usually being copper Britannia metal approx 93 tin 5 antimony and 2 copper Cupronickel Sheffield plateReferences Edit a b c Principles of Metallurgy p 62 ISBN 978 1 4400 5699 4 Gayle Margot Look David W Waite John G April 1993 Metals in America s Historic Buildings Uses and Preservation Treatments Pt 1 A Historical Survey of Metals Pt 2 Deterioration and Methods of Preserving Metals p 35 ISBN 978 0 16 061655 6 Oxford English Dictionary Marks of Berndorf Metalware Factory in Austria Marks of Alpacca and Alpacca Silver II Products an article for ASCAS Association of Small Collectors of Antique Silver website Ascasonline org Retrieved on 2013 12 19 Tim McCreight The Complete Metalsmith Samuel J Rosenberg Nickel and its alloys Vol Monograph 106 National Bureau of Standards p 8 6 Keith Pinn Paktong The Chinese Alloy in Europe a b Joseph Needham Ling Wang Gwei Djen Lu Tsuen hsuin Tsien Dieter Kuhn Peter J Golas Science and civilisation in China Cambridge University Press 1974 ISBN 0 521 08571 3 pp 237 250 Nickel Silver retrieved 19 April 2010 Oberg Erik Jones Franklin Day 1917 Machinery s Encyclopedia The Industrial Press etc etc p 412 The alloy came originally from China where its composition is said to have been known Dwight Dana James 1869 Manual of Mineralogy p 265 smuggled into various parts of the East Indies and is not allowed to be carried out of the empire Holmyard E J 1957 Alchemy p 80 New York Dover a b c Derk Bodde China s Gifts to the West Columbia University Neumann Bernhard 1904 Die Metalle Geschichte Vorkommen und Gewinnung nebst ausfuhrlicher Produktions und Preis Statistik Vom Verein zur Beforderung des Gewerbefleisses preisgekronte Arbeit p 327 ISBN 9785877316324 Neumann B 1903 Die Anfange der Argentan Neusilber Industrie und der technischen Nickelerzeugung Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Chemie 16 10 225 Bibcode 1903AngCh 16 225N doi 10 1002 ange 19030161004 Dubin Lois Sherr North American Indian Jewelry and Adornment From Prehistory to the Present New York Harry N Abrams 1999 ISBN 0 8109 3689 5 pp 290 293 1 Archived 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2 dead link 3 Archived 4 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine Quantz505 Pearl Flute Worldwide Archived 7 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Pearlflute com Retrieved on 2013 12 19 Elegante Pearl Flute Worldwide Archived 7 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Pearlflute com Retrieved on 2013 12 19 4 Archived 6 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bach gt Professional Bb Tenor Trombones gt Viewing Model LT16M Archived 16 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bachbrass com Retrieved on 2013 12 19 Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy 17th ed p 56External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article German Silver German Silver The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Silver s Sterling Qualities Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nickel silver amp oldid 1160141440, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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