Marine engineering Cupronickel alloys are used for marine applications due to their resistance to seawater
corrosion, good fabricability, and their effectiveness in lowering
macrofouling levels. Alloys ranging in composition from 90% Cu–10% Ni to 70% Cu–30% Ni are commonly specified in
heat exchanger or condenser tubes in a wide variety of marine applications. Important marine applications for cupronickel include: •
Shipbuilding and repair:
hulls of boats and ships, seawater cooling, bilge and ballast, sanitary, fire fighting, inert gas, hydraulic and pneumatic chiller systems. •
Desalination plants: brine heaters, heat rejection and recovery, and in evaporator tubing. •
Offshore oil and gas platforms and processing and
FPSO vessels: systems and splash zone sheathings. •
Power generation: steam turbine condensers, oil coolers, auxiliary cooling systems and high pressure pre-heaters at nuclear and fossil fuel power plants. • Seawater system components: condenser and heat exchanger tubes, tube sheets, piping, high pressure systems, fittings, pumps, and water boxes.
Coinage The successful use of cupronickel in coinage is due to its
corrosion resistance,
electrical conductivity, durability,
malleability, low
allergy risk, ease of
stamping,
antimicrobial properties and
recyclability. In Europe,
Switzerland pioneered cupronickel-based
billon coinage in 1850, with the addition of silver and zinc, for coins of 5, 10 and 20 Rappen. Starting in 1860/1861,
Belgium issued 5, 10 and 20 Centimes in pure cupronickel (75% copper, 25% nickel, without additional silver and zinc), and
Germany issued 5 and 10 Pfennig in the same 75:25 ratio from 1873/1874 (until 1915/1916). In 1879, Switzerland, for 5 and 10 Rappen coins, also adopted that cheaper 75:25 copper to nickel ratio then being used in Belgium, the
United States and Germany. From 1947 to 2012, all "silver"
coinage in the UK was made from cupronickel (but from 2012 onwards the two smallest UK cupronickel denominations were replaced with lower-cost nickel-plated steel coins). Moreover, when
silver prices rose in the 1960s/1970s also some other European countries replaced remaining silver denominations by cupronickel, e.g. the 1/2 to (pictured) 5
Swiss franc coins starting 1968 and German 5
Deutsche Mark 1975–2001. Since 1999, cupronickel is also used for the inner segment of the
1 euro coin and the outer segment of the
2 euro coin. In part due to silver hoarding in the Civil War, the United States Mint first used cupronickel for circulating coinage in
three-cent pieces starting in 1865, and then for
five-cent pieces starting in 1866. Prior to these dates, both denominations had been made only in silver in the United States. Cupronickel is the
cladding on either side of United States
half-dollars (50¢) since 1971, and all
quarters (25¢) and
dimes (10¢) made after 1964. Currently, some circulating coins, such as the United States Jefferson nickel (5¢), the
Swiss franc, and the
South Korean 500 and 100
won are made of solid cupronickel (75:25 ratio).
Decorative housewares Nickel silver cupronickels are used extensively as a substitute for silver in tableware and other decorative housewares. Nickel silver is also used as a base for
silver plating, where the product is known as electro-plated nickel silver, or EPNS.
Other usage A
thermocouple junction is formed from a pair of thermocouple conductors such as iron-
constantan, copper-constantan or nickel-chromium/nickel-aluminium. The junction may be protected within a sheath of copper, cupronickel or stainless steel. Cupronickel is used in
cryogenic applications. It retains high ductility and thermal conductivity at very low temperatures. Where other metals like steel or aluminum would shatter and become thermally inert, cupronickel's unusual thermal and mechanical performance at these low temperatures facilitate a number of niche uses. Machinery that must perform many duty cycles at continuously low-temperatures and heat exchangers at cryogenic plants are the main industrial destinations of cupronickel in cryogenic applications. Niche applications also exist, for example the alloy's high thermal conductivity at low temperatures has made cupronickel ubiquitous in
freeze branding operations. In the early 20th century, this material was used to make bullet jackets. But it was soon replaced by
gilding metal to reduce metal contamination of the barrel
bore. Currently, cupronickel and nickel silver remain the basic material for silver-plated cutlery. It is commonly used for mechanical and electrical equipment, medical equipment, zippers, jewelry items, and both for strings for instruments in the violin family, and for guitar frets.
Fender Musical Instruments used "CuNiFe" magnets in their "Wide Range
Humbucker" pickup for various
Telecaster and
Starcaster guitars during the 1970s. For high-quality
cylinder locks and locking systems, cylinder cores are made from wear-resistant cupronickel. Cupronickel has been used as an alternative to traditional steel
hydraulic brake lines (the pipes containing the
brake fluid), as it does not rust. Since cupronickel is much softer than steel, it bends and
flares more easily, and the same property allows it to form a better seal with hydraulic components. ==Physical and mechanical properties==