Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires

Objective: This study aimed to determine the composition and corrosion resistance of stainless steel and nickel titanium (NiTi) archwires and to compare Ni released from simulated standard fixed orthodontic appliances ligated with stainless steel and NiTi wires in artificial saliva at pH 5.14 and pH...

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Main Authors: Wassana Wichai, Niwat Anuwongnukroh, Surachai Dechkunakorn
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/33826
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spelling th-mahidol.338262018-11-09T09:13:59Z Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires Wassana Wichai Niwat Anuwongnukroh Surachai Dechkunakorn Mahidol University Engineering Objective: This study aimed to determine the composition and corrosion resistance of stainless steel and nickel titanium (NiTi) archwires and to compare Ni released from simulated standard fixed orthodontic appliances ligated with stainless steel and NiTi wires in artificial saliva at pH 5.14 and pH 6.69. in 4 weeks at 37°C. Materials and Method: Two commercial rectangular wires, 0.016 × 0.022" in size were studied, one Ormco stainless steel wire and another Ormco nickel titanium wire. Their composition was analyzed by an energy disporsive X-ray spectrometer (ESC) and their corrosion resistance was evaluated by a potentiodynamic polarization technique. For Ni release, the twenty-eight simulated fixed appliance sample sets were used, each corresponding to one half-maxillary arch. The samples were divided in 2 groups (14 sets per group). The first one was ligated to Ormco stainless steel archwires and the other one to Ormco NiTi archwires with elastomeric ligatures. Half sets of each group were immersed in 50 ml artificial saliva at pH 5.14 and the other half were immersed at pH 6.69. Ni release was quantified using flame atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Statistical analysis of variance (t-test) was determined on days 1, 4, 7, 9, 14, 21 and 28 comparing the amount of Ni released between groups. Results: Stainless steel wire was composed of Ni, Cr, Si, Mn and Fe while the nickel titanium wire was composed of Ti, Ni and Cr. NiTi wire has more percentage of Ni and therefore has less corrosion resistance than stainless steel wire. For Ni release, stainless steel and NiTi continuously increased at the time intervals for both pH levels. For group one, stainless steel wire had more Ni release at pH 5.14 and for the other group, NiTi wire had more Ni-release at pH 6.69. At 4 weeks, the Ni release of one half-maxillary arch was 1.383 ppm (1383 μg/l) at pH 5.14 and 1.079 ppm (1078 μg/l) at pH 6.69 for stainless steel wire while it was 1.221 ppm (1221 μg/l) at pH 5.14 and 1.267 ppm (1267μg/l) at pH 6.69 for NiTi wire. No significant difference was found in the amount of Ni release from stainless steel and NiTi wires at pH 5.14 and pH 6.69 in the different time intervals except on day 1 wherein the stainless steel archwire was significantly different (p<0.05) at pH 5.14 and pH 6.69. Conclusions: The NiTi wire had more Ni contain and less corrosion resistance than stainless steel wire. Stainless steel had more Ni release at pH 5.14 than pH 6.69 but NiTi had greater Ni release at pH 6.69 than pH 5.14. © (2014) Trans Tech Publications, Switzerland. 2018-11-09T02:13:59Z 2018-11-09T02:13:59Z 2014-02-20 Conference Paper Advanced Materials Research. Vol.884-885, (2014), 560-565 10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMR.884-885.560 10226680 2-s2.0-84893923549 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/33826 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84893923549&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Engineering
spellingShingle Engineering
Wassana Wichai
Niwat Anuwongnukroh
Surachai Dechkunakorn
Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires
description Objective: This study aimed to determine the composition and corrosion resistance of stainless steel and nickel titanium (NiTi) archwires and to compare Ni released from simulated standard fixed orthodontic appliances ligated with stainless steel and NiTi wires in artificial saliva at pH 5.14 and pH 6.69. in 4 weeks at 37°C. Materials and Method: Two commercial rectangular wires, 0.016 × 0.022" in size were studied, one Ormco stainless steel wire and another Ormco nickel titanium wire. Their composition was analyzed by an energy disporsive X-ray spectrometer (ESC) and their corrosion resistance was evaluated by a potentiodynamic polarization technique. For Ni release, the twenty-eight simulated fixed appliance sample sets were used, each corresponding to one half-maxillary arch. The samples were divided in 2 groups (14 sets per group). The first one was ligated to Ormco stainless steel archwires and the other one to Ormco NiTi archwires with elastomeric ligatures. Half sets of each group were immersed in 50 ml artificial saliva at pH 5.14 and the other half were immersed at pH 6.69. Ni release was quantified using flame atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Statistical analysis of variance (t-test) was determined on days 1, 4, 7, 9, 14, 21 and 28 comparing the amount of Ni released between groups. Results: Stainless steel wire was composed of Ni, Cr, Si, Mn and Fe while the nickel titanium wire was composed of Ti, Ni and Cr. NiTi wire has more percentage of Ni and therefore has less corrosion resistance than stainless steel wire. For Ni release, stainless steel and NiTi continuously increased at the time intervals for both pH levels. For group one, stainless steel wire had more Ni release at pH 5.14 and for the other group, NiTi wire had more Ni-release at pH 6.69. At 4 weeks, the Ni release of one half-maxillary arch was 1.383 ppm (1383 μg/l) at pH 5.14 and 1.079 ppm (1078 μg/l) at pH 6.69 for stainless steel wire while it was 1.221 ppm (1221 μg/l) at pH 5.14 and 1.267 ppm (1267μg/l) at pH 6.69 for NiTi wire. No significant difference was found in the amount of Ni release from stainless steel and NiTi wires at pH 5.14 and pH 6.69 in the different time intervals except on day 1 wherein the stainless steel archwire was significantly different (p<0.05) at pH 5.14 and pH 6.69. Conclusions: The NiTi wire had more Ni contain and less corrosion resistance than stainless steel wire. Stainless steel had more Ni release at pH 5.14 than pH 6.69 but NiTi had greater Ni release at pH 6.69 than pH 5.14. © (2014) Trans Tech Publications, Switzerland.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Wassana Wichai
Niwat Anuwongnukroh
Surachai Dechkunakorn
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Wassana Wichai
Niwat Anuwongnukroh
Surachai Dechkunakorn
author_sort Wassana Wichai
title Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires
title_short Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires
title_full Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires
title_fullStr Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of chemical properties and Ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires
title_sort comparison of chemical properties and ni release of stainless steel and nickel titanium wires
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/33826
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