[Is the shape memory effect a reality for 35° Copper Ni-Ti(®)? Study by means of differential scanning calorimetry].

Orthod Fr

Département d'Orthopédie Dento-Faciale, Faculté d'Odontologie de Nancy, Université de Lorraine, 96 avenue du Maréchal de Lattre de Tassigny, 54000 Nancy, France.

Published: September 2013

Introduction: Copper-nickel-titanium alloys are supposed to deliver a shape memory effect: when they are brought to a low temperature phase and subjected to a plastic deformation, they should recover their initial shape by simple heating. Nickel-titanium alloys can display different crystallographic phases: martensite, austenite and an inconstant intermediate R-phase. The shape memory effect is generally associated with the transition from martensite to austenite but it could also accompany the transition from R-phase to austenite. Since oral temperatures are not compatible with a fully martensitic alloy, this study aims, for 35° Copper Ni-Ti(®), to assess the R-phase presence at oral temperatures and to verify the possibility of using the R-phase shape memory effect under clinical conditions.

Materials And Methods: Thirty consecutive 35° Copper Ni-Ti(®) archwires from two different batches were examined by differential scanning calorimetry with partial cycles limited to temperatures encountered within the oral cavity (from 0 °C to 50 °C). The presence of an intermediate crystallographic phase was assessed on the thermograms. The transformation temperatures were determined and the two batches were compared using the Mann-Whitney U Test.

Results: Upon heating, all wires transformed directly from martensite to austenite. Af (mean  = 33.5 °C, SD  = 0.8 °C) was generally below the temperature stated by the manufacturer and a statistically significant difference (p ≤ 0.01) was found between the two batches.

Conclusions: No R-phase was detected and transformation temperatures were not constant. This study questions the supposed shape memory effect displayed by 35° Copper Ni-Ti(®) wires under clinical conditions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/orthodfr/2013057DOI Listing

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