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Issue title: Medical Applications of Shape Memory Alloys
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Airoldi, G. | Riva, G.
Affiliations: Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Milano, Via Celoria 16, 20133 Milano, Italy, Tel.: +39 2 2392397; Fax: +39 2 2392630; E-mail: [email protected] | I.N.F.M. (Istituto Nazionale per la Fisica della Materia), Universita' di Milano, Dipartimento di Fisica, Via Celoria 16, 20133 Milano, Italy
Abstract: Since ten years the NiTi alloys have gained an ever increasing place in orthodontic practice: that is due to their peculiar mechanical properties ascribed to a martensitic thermoelastic transformation which can be thermally or, in a proper temperature range, stress-induced. In the last case, when martensite is stress-induced at body temperature, the stress-strain behaviour is pseudoelastic with large deformations gained or recovered at constant stress, respectively in direct/reverse transformation: this behaviour exploited in orthodontics allowed to overcome the drawbacks intrinsic to the use of conventional alloys as stainless steel or Co-Mo alloys, where small displacements can be achieved at decreasing loads. From the phase state diagram of NiTi alloys it appears that at body temperature they are stable, but out of equilibrium: thermal treatments at intermediate temperatures can therefore modify the equilibrium state and as a consequence the transformation temperatures respect to body temperature. That allows to modify the recovery stress level according to the requirements of practice and thus disclosing new roads: the capability to foresee NiTi archwires pre-programmed in different sections, with a personalized scheme. Attention has not currently been paid to the modifications in the recovery stress induced by a temperature change inside the oral cavity. Recent results have shown that the thermal changes in the oral cavity induced by cold/hot liquid intake can considerably modify the stress level to which the dentition is exposed: though confined to the time extent connected with drinking, similar effects can be expected also for meals intake and should be taken into account for a correct procedure.
Keywords: NiTi alloy, shape memory alloys, orthodontics, superelasticity, martensitic transformation
DOI: 10.3233/BME-1996-6407
Journal: Bio-Medical Materials and Engineering, vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 299-305, 1996
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