Chemical elements used in non-circulating commemorative, demo, bullion or fantasy coins, medals, patterns, and trial strikes: •
Cadmium: 1828 medal made by G. Loos for the marriage of Heinrich von Dechen, "of Silesian cadmium". •
Cobalt: 2005 Cameroon 750 CFA francs struck in cobalt-plated iron. •
Hafnium: Fred Zinkann demo coin. •
Iridium: 2013
oz 10 franc bullion coin issued by Rwanda as part of "Noble Five" precious metals set. •
Molybdenum: Demo coin, Fred Zinkann. 2008 1 tr oz coins by Coins By Design, Murray Buckner (mintage 250). •
Niobium: Austria has issued a number of bimetallic 25 euro coins with a niobium center. •
Palladium: First issued 1966 by Sierra Leone. Also presentation sets from Tonga and bullion coins of various countries. •
Rhenium: Fred Zinkann fantasy pieces, Pope Matthew Triple Ducat and Malvinas 5 Australes •
Rhodium: 2014
oz 10 franc bullion coin issued by Rwanda as part of "Noble Six" precious metals set. Also Cohen Mint bullion round. •
Ruthenium: 1967
Hau from Tonga was 98% palladium and 2% ruthenium. •
Selenium: 1862 medal in UK Science Museum, commemorating
Berzelius, discoverer of the element. •
Silicon: Privately struck US quarter patterns dated 1964 (Pollock-5380) in nickel-silicon alloy. •
Tantalum: Used in a bimetallic silver-tantalum coin from Kazakhstan. •
Tellurium: 1896 Hungarian mining medal. Reproductions exist from 1975. •
Titanium: First issued 1999 by Gibraltar. Austria has made bimetallic silver/titanium commemoratives. •
Tungsten: While Tungsten alloys are too hard for practical use, a few private demos have been struck for experimentation, e.g. Fred Zinkann US half eagle patterns. •
Uranium: Two types of a German medal of native uranium. •
Vanadium: 2011 1 Troy ounce coins by Coins By Design, Murray Buckner (mintage 20). •
Zirconium: 2012 1 Troy ounce coins, including 50 black & 50 Rainbow, by Coins By Design, Murray Buckner (mintage 500).
Element Series Beginning in 2006, Dave Hamric (Metallium) has been attempting to strike "coins" (technically tokens or medals, about the size of a US cent) of every stable chemical element. He has struck tokens of the following elements:
aluminium,
antimony,
barium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
beryllium,
bismuth,
boron (mixed with binder, sealed in resin cast),
cadmium,
calcium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
carbon (mixed with binder, sealed in resin cast),
cerium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
chromium,
cobalt,
copper,
dysprosium,
erbium,
europium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
gadolinium,
gallium,
gold,
hafnium,
holmium,
indium,
iridium,
iron,
lanthanum (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
lead,
lutetium,
magnesium,
mercury (sealed in resin cast, containing the expected coin-weight of liquid mercury),
molybdenum,
neodymium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
nickel,
niobium,
palladium,
phosphorus (mixed with binder, sealed in resin cast),
platinum,
praseodymium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
rhenium,
rhodium,
ruthenium,
samarium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
scandium,
selenium,
silver,
strontium (reactive, sealed in glass capsule),
sulfur,
tantalum,
tellurium,
terbium,
thallium (extremely poisonous; lead token clad on one side with thallium foil and sealed in resin),
thulium,
tin,
titanium,
uranium (not offered for sale),
vanadium,
ytterbium,
yttrium,
zinc,
zirconium. ==Non-metallic materials used for circulating coins==