Fun Varieties Spring 2022, Toned Coins, a Variety and The Questions
by: Dr. Ron Brown | Tuesday, January 11, 2022 | 0 Comments
Fun Varieties
Spring 2022
Toned Coins, a Variety and The
Questions
I’m not sure when this fascination
with toned coin came about but it reminds me of an incident I observed very
early in my medical carrier. We were offering free prenatal vitamins to expectant
mother in a clinic I rotated though – No one took them. Then a senior nurse decided to offer them at
a very low price, and they flew out of the clinic. I also recall a time when I
wanted to sell a rare, engraved rifle and I offered it at the discount price as
I needed the money. I received NO offers. So, I decided to offer it a price
double its value and I received multiple offers. The dynamics at play in these
examples are kind of like this – not preferred but then offered for a premium
they become desirable.
Not often thought as one, but a
toned coin is a variety coin. An ever-growing trend of the selling and
collecting of toned coins raises questions in the minds of many. I was prompted
in writing this article from my observations and comments like the following.
In the August 31st letters section of Numismatic News, a reader
said, “I have been collecting certified toned coins – so I don’t have to
worry about artificial toning. With these coins in holders, I feel that the
toning process is stopped thus color will remain great.” This opinion is no
fault of the reader who made the comment. Rather, it lays at the feet of our
hobby that’s in a frenzy to make money, has not been accurate in provided
information to rightly inform the hobbyist/collector about toned coins. There
would be no need to write about toned coins, if they were offered saying that
the stability of the toning cannot be guaranteed, but I have not seen this
here-to-date. Granted, if the coin is removed for the environment that caused
the toning, it will be slowed but is it stopped? This article may make some
collectors or sellers of toned coins unhappy, but then there are those who will
support it. I only wish to stimulate thought and convey some data about the
subject.
One of the most reactive of our coin
metals is copper as evidenced by toning or color on the coin. Most red brown
(RB) cents these days were likely red (RD) sometime in the past, slabbed or
not. Toning is a chemical process where the surface of a metal such as silver,
reacts with its adjacent surroundings, environment or atmosphere. This
interaction can be described with the following formulas below for silver and
copper.
Silver: 4Ag + 2H2S + O2 = 2Ag2S + 2H2O
Copper: 2CuO + CO2 + H2O → Cu2CO3(OH)2 ?
There are also oxidation formulas
for Nickle and Gold coin
I
recall around 2005 a senior executive from a large firm selling toned coins to
say,” To create such a myriad of vibrant and diverse tones required ideal
storage conditions.” Wrong! In an “ideal” storage condition, no toning would
have occurred. For toning to occur, there had to be poor storage conditions
and/or contaminates that caused the toning and who knows what was found in the
bag unfit for selling that you never heard about. Maybe ideal for toning but not ideal for
storage or coin preservation. If you want “right, you need white”. White
meaning, cartwheel shinning silver coins”.
Coins,
being made of various metals, are composed of molecules, atoms and their ions
just like everything else. And the atoms of these molecules have an affinity to
interact with other molecules and their atoms. In this case, almost all this
activity occurs on the coins metal surface. This of course is a process that is
influenced by the various alloys of our coins and the reactive oxidation
potentials that each metal in the alloys are susceptible to.
There
is no way to describe this interaction other than to call it oxidation, or
patina, or corrosion. Strictly speaking, they are all correct! And while
“patina” sounds appealing, “corrosion” undoubtedly does not. Maybe that’s why
collectors can have such strong opinions about this one way or the other when
it comes to toning. The
main difference between corrosion and oxidation is that corrosion happens
chiefly on metal surfaces whereas oxidation can happen with almost anything.
On silver coins, those that seem to
have the most brilliant toning possibilities; though I have seen some bold
coloring on copper coins and to a lesser extent on nickels; this interaction
resulting on it as a thin layer of silver sulfide or Ag2S
on a silver coin, which gradually forms on the coin surface from the
interaction of hydrogen sulfide. The hydrogen sulfide or H2S is
present in the atmosphere around us in small quantities and H2S is
the major producer of silver corrosion in atmosphere that produces the Ag2S
on the coins. This explains why silver will always tone if left exposed to the
air with the substances of the surrounding environment determining the location
of toning on the coin and the rate of change. Heat and humidity will accelerate
the process. The formation of a discontinuous film of Ag2S, is the
principal constituent of the corrosion product. By the way, oxidation come from
the word oxygen, which is among the many known oxidizers. Ask yourself, how do
you protect your coins from oxygen? If you think slabbed, it has trapped oxygen
in it, and if your coin is already toned, the oxidants that caused the toning
in the first place are still present on the coin and in the slab, substantiated
by its colors and are still interacting with the coins surface, SLABBED or NOT.
The silver sulfide itself is black and can often be seen on tarnished table silverware. However, the thickening layer of silver sulfide will produce various colors through what is known as the “Thin-Film Interference Effect” if applied correctly, (which generally means slowly).
The
Thin-Film Interference Effect is familiar to anyone who has ever seen the
bright colors refracted off a blown soap bubble. It appears like this. A beam of light strikes the surface of a coin
containing a thin layer of silver sulfide Ag2S, at an angle. The
beam is split into two beams, or light waves, one is bent or refracted
immediately and the other penetrates the upper layer and then is refracted. At
any rate, metal ions on the surface of a coin react with chemicals in the
environment to create a thin layer of a new substance on top of the coin. The
interaction of light as it reflects off of both the new material and the
original coin surface results in the colorful patterns, we now are calling coin
toning. See illustration below
The
vibrant colors of "toning" that coin collectors seem to appreciate
are caused by thin film interference, where the "thin film" in
question is a layer of corrosion by-products sitting on the surface of the
metal. The thinnest films develop and then it moves down through the rainbow:
yellow, orange, green blue. Once you get past blue, the corrosion layer becomes
too thick for light to pass through it, and it becomes opaque - which we see as
black. At this point, people usually start to call it "tarnish"
rather than "toning" and it suddenly becomes undesirable. But I say,
this whole process is undesirable!
Light striking a thin film is partially reflected (ray 1) at the top surface. The refracted ray is partially reflected at the bottom surface and emerges as ray 2. These rays will interfere in a way that depends on the thickness of the film and the properties of refraction of the various metals the thin film is on. A is thin film surface and B is surface of coin that the film in on.
In
this case, the light that goes through the layer is affected based upon the
type of metal and the thickness of the layer it is passing through. This part
of the beam is out of sync with the other beam and now is in a different
wavelength. The wavelength shift results in two light wavelengths, producing a
different color to the naked eye in each. Light that is visible to the human
eye covers a spectrum of wavelengths, ranging from about 380 nanometers (nm)
for violet to about 700 nm for deep red. Every color in the spectrum has a
corresponding wavelength of light.
The wavelengths of visible light by
the human eye are:
Violet: 380–450 nm
Blue: 450–495 nm
Green: 495–570 nm
Yellow: 570–590 nm
Orange: 590–620 nm
Red: 620–750 nm
Thin Film Thickness |
-
Color |
100nm |
Light
Yellow |
130nm |
Burgundy |
200nm |
Cobal
Blue |
300nm |
Yellow |
350nm |
Orange |
360nm |
Red |
380nm |
Magenta |
420nm |
Blue |
450nm |
Light
Blue |
470nm |
Cyan |
520nm |
Green |
The phase shift to cancel blue light is
roughly 220 nm, which requires a toning layer of about half of 110 nm. Without
blue, you have red and green, which usually combines into yellow. This is the
reason why the first signs of toning will always be yellow on a silver coin. However, it is possible for “artificial”
(hereafter we will call it “accelerated”), attempts at toning a coin for the
process to occur so quickly that the toning layer will be so thick that the
natural progression of colors is completely bypassed. As I like to say, “Do it
Fast and you get Black.” You may then end up with a silver black coin in its
final state. The table below gives the natural progression of toning and its
corresponding color.
Soap bubble refraction of light as an example
Color of the refracted light as a function of the film thickness
[Isenberg, 1992]
The
difference between natural and accelerated toning is not clearly defined and
highly subjective but don’t tell that to the dealers and certifying houses. In
general, anything that quickly causes toning is considered accelerated. A clear
example of accelerated
toning is to use concentrations of chemicals in a laboratory to tone a coin. In
this example, it's possible to get a toned coin in seconds but the chemicals to
do this, such as Hydrogen Sulfide, is very toxic.
Nonetheless,
these novice attempts at toning coins are generally different from coins that
toned more gradually. They tend to exhibit certain signs that are said to be
well known in the collecting community and relatively easy to detect. Suffice
it to say that there is a delineation of colors that often is not present on a
coin that was subject to accelerated toning. (see color delineation on coin
below) Certain patterns and color combinations it is said can also only be
achieved through natural toning and not through accelerated toning. There is a
possibility some extremely skilled individual can produce a coin that can fool
the experts, but this would be uncommon, but not impossible, as they also know
of this accelerated toning downside.
Authors photo
The said benefit of a toned coin is
its beauty. Additionally, an attractively toned coin might be deemed desirable
over other untoned coins and the toning can make it appeal to collectors who
are willing to buy it, even at a premium. When it comes to slabbing,
professional grading companies are adding a special indicator to denote a
coin’s perceived eye appeal. In our current marketplace it is not uncommon for
attractively toned coins to be worth more than a similar untoned coin, but
should it be?
The question every toned coin
aficionado should be asking themselves is “is the toning on a coin in a state
of permanency?” In other words, is the color on the coin stable or is it in
flux? To this in a bit.
I have no problem with someone
considering toning to be damage as it is a state of corrosion. On a more
objective level, it is certainly an alteration to the coin surface as intended.
Oxidation is described as an electrochemical reaction between oxygen and other
substances, whether metal or living tissues. It can also be described as a loss
of electrons or Hydrogen atoms, which results in a gain of oxygen atoms – the
molecule of silver in this case is changed.
Definition of Oxidation:
Oxidation is the loss of electrons during a reaction
by a molecule, atom or ion.
Definition of Corrosion:
Corrosion is the deterioration of a material due to
different reactions taking place on its surface when the material
(coin metal) is exposed to chemical in its environment.
Which one of these definitions do
you think best describe the toning of a coin? Neither of them, in my mind, are
good. The main difference between corrosion and
oxidation is that corrosion happens chiefly on metal surfaces whereas oxidation
can happen anywhere. Rust is often the result of oxidation when it occurs
on metals or metallic materials. Is that damage? What else would you call it?
In our hobby today, it’s become “Eye Appeal.”
Any "toning" or "discoloration" is, in a word,
corrosion. Usually a very, very thin layer of corrosion, but corrosion
none-the-less. Corrosion on coins is caused by exposure to the environment,
usually some component of the atmosphere. If we're talking silver coins, then
the atmospheric culprit is sulfur, usually, in the form of sulfur dioxide or
hydrogen sulfide. When
a molecule (H2S) interacts with a metal surface, the interaction
involves both a transfer of electrons from the molecule’s highest occupied
molecular orbital to the metal surface (direct bonding) and a shift of
electrons from the metal surface to the molecule’s lowest unoccupied molecular
orbital (back bonding). In other words, the thin film becomes part of the coins
metal surface.
The appearance of a coin, for better
or for worse, is known as “eye appeal”. While eye appeal can consider all
manner of details that affect a coin’s appearance, the term is usually used to
refer to those traits that do NOT contribute to the grade or condition of a
coin. So, why pay for something that is guaranteed to change over time and is
not part of the grade? Here is a coin that has a very high grade but what is
your impression of it eye appeal?
Certified 1893 S in MS 67 – used
with permission
Great Collections Coin Auctions
Pictured above, this coin has
toning, but based upon eye appeal most would call it tarnished – both are the
same. To me it looks like a change in the slab over time. The reverse is almost
identical in appearance and condition. Sulfur in the atmosphere can come from
several sources. There is a small amount present in "natural" air.
Living in a polluted city obviously has more. Kitchens where onions and similar
foods are prepared and cooked also create a large amount of sulfur in the air.
Finally, sulfurous gases can leach out of various kinds of wood, paper and
other "solid" objects over time. Do you store your coins with any of
these present? Natural Rubber is very high in sulfur and gives off a lot of
sulfurous gases as it slowly decomposes. Keep rubber bands away!
A quote for Scott Travers in
2009 says, “NGC conducted some very intriguing age-acceleration simulations in
which coins that were sonically sealed in tamper-resistant holders, had their
age accelerated by decades. The results proved unsatisfactory, at least in
terms of copper coins; the coins actually deteriorated while they were in the
holders.” This statement causes many questions. How did they do age accelerate
of the coins? Did the process of aging penetrate the holders, etc., etc.? Over
time collectors have come to learn that there really is no way that a coin can
be completely protected against environmental variables, whether it’s in a slab
or not. However, the slab does protect the coin from further contact marks over
what might be on the coin at the time it was sealed in the slab. There are
several cases where moisture in the air penetrated the holders, as well as
other cases where coins made of highly susceptible and vulnerable metals were,
in a sense, choking in their holders, trapped inside with the chemical
reactions and airborne particulate matter, which had caused the coins to tone
or deteriorate in the first place. Mr. Travers goes on to say, “Because copper
coins are so susceptible to damage and deterioration, NGC does not guarantee
the grades it assigns to them, as it does with coins produced in other metals.
PCGS does guarantee the grades of copper coins, but I have seen no difference
in the way these coins deteriorate while encapsulated, whether the holders came
from one service or the other.” Chemistry would agree with his observation. I
have had my own experience with this. At one time in 2019, I owned a 2008,
reverse of 2007 Silver Eagle in MS 70.
While in its slab, and kept
in a humidity controlled safe, a dark spot developed on the coin that was not
there at the time I bought it. I had to have it submitted to NCS to have the
spot removed so I could sell it. Did NGC create NCS because it knew of this
problem as mentioned by Travers? I do not know, but it begs the question, if
they can remove spots on coins without evidence that the spot was ever there,
could toning be added by others?
Not all discoloration is
caused by atmospheric effects, however. Black spots, often called "carbon
spots", are often caused by small droplets of water landing on a coin. If
the drops are generated by someone coughing or sneezing, then it isn’t water,
it's spittle - which contains all kinds of chemicals which can accelerate the
formation of a corrosive patches where the droplet landed. Fingerprints, of
course, are comprised of oil from your skin, and that oil is quite rich in
sulfur compounds - which is why fingerprints turn black on coins. AND BTW, do
you have any idea about the quality controls and their use when handling our
coins behind the scenes for grading and slabbing? Do they wear masks, corrosion
inhibiting gloves, etc., when handling our coins? When I read about their
published numbers of coin they handle, I have serious budget concerns about the
use of any.
Both "natural
toning" and "accelerated toning" are caused by chemistry, where
the metal reacts with something in the atmosphere to create a corrosion
by-product.
When describing the more
deceptive kinds of coin alteration, it is not a criminal act in that the owner
of the coin is not altering the coin to fraudulently pass it off as something
other than that denomination as intended. To do so, would be counterfeiting!
The law reads, “Fraudulent alternations”. This toning question is no different
than the cut-out coins or plated coins that are sold as curio pieces. In each
case, the mints intended denomination remains. At worst, a toned coin deemed by
a certifying house to be a product of accelerated toning, or their “artificial
toning,” would be rejected and certification fees lost. Another topic for
another time.
So, what is your verdict on
toned coins, “buy or not buy - that is the question?” To me when buying a coin we make educated
judgments ever time - grade, value, investment potential etc., etc. There is no
difference here. My hope is, that you now have more information to consider
before you act.
Leave A Comment
Don’t worry ! your e-mail address will not published.