6533b7dafe1ef96bd126e387

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Effect of temperature on the orthodontic clinical applications of NiTi closed-coil springs

Camilo Abalos-lasbrucciJosé-maría Barrera-moraFrancisco-javier Gil-murEduardo Espinar-escalonaJosé-maría Llamas-carreras

subject

Materials scienceElasticidadOrtodòncia616.3OdontologíaOrthodontics:Enginyeria dels materials [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Load cellNiTiCorrosionPhysical PhenomenaStress (mechanics)RecoveryMaterials TestingBiomaterials and Bioengineering in DentistryOrthodontic WiresOrthodonticComposite materialSuperelasticitySalivaGeneral DentistryUniversal testing machineElasticitatTemperatureNíquel-titani -- AliatgesCoilsTemperatura:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Coil springCiencias de la saludElasticityOrtodonciaNickel-titanium alloysSpringsOtorhinolaryngologySpring (device)Nickel titaniumPseudoelasticityUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASResearch-ArticleSurgery

description

NiTi spring coils were used to obtain large deformation under a constant force. The device consists on a NiTi coil spring, superelastic at body temperature, in order to have a stress plateau during the austenitic retransformation during the unloading. The temperature variations induced changes in the spring force. Objectives: The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of the temperature variations in the spring forces and corrosion behaviour simulating the ingestion hot/cold drinks and food. Study D esign: The springs were subjected to a tensile force using universal testing machine MTS-Adamel (100 N load cell). All tests were performed in artificial saliva maintained at different temperatures. The corrosion tests were performed according to the ISO-standard 10993-15:2000. Results: The increase in temperature of 18 o C induced an increase in the spring force of 30%. However, when the temperature returns to 37 o C the distraction force recovers near the initial level. After cooling down the spring to 15 o C, the force decreased by 46%. This investigation show as the temperature increase, the corrosion potential shifts towards negative values and the corrosion density is rising. Conclusions: The changes of the temperatures do not modify the superelastic behaviour of the NiTi closed-coil springs. The corrosion potential of NiTi in artificial saliva is decreasing by the rise of the temperatures. Peer Reviewed

10.4317/medoral.19073https://hdl.handle.net/2117/21237