Metals Flashcards
ILO 1.6c: have knowledge of the clinical and physical properties as well as the clinical uses of a range of dental materials
when are metals used in dentistry?
5
- partial denture framework (CoCr, type IV gold)
- crowns (stainless steel)
- denture base (stainless steel)
- orthodontic appliance (NiTi)
- restorations (amalgam)
why are metals used in dentistry?
mechanical properties
* high strength
* rigidity
* surface hardness
* degree of ductility
what is the definition of a metal?
aggregate of atoms in a crystaline structure
what is the definition of an alloy?
combination of two or more types of metal in a crystalline structure
what factors affect mechanical properties?
- crystalline structure
- grain size
- grain imperfections
describe the cooling curve of a metal
- in molten form, the metal atoms flow readily and are arranged randomly
- as the temperature drops to its melting point, some metal atoms begin to crystalise and temperature remains constant
- when crystallisation is complete, all metal atoms have formed a crystalline structure and the temperature drops gradually to room temperature
describe how crystals grow
- molten metal atoms reach their melting point and crystallise and form nuclei of crystallisation
- the crystals grow as dendrites
- crystals/grains continue developing until they impinge on a neighbouring crystal - grain boundary (stops each other from further growth)
- grains are of different size and shape
what are equi-axed grains?
when crystal growth is of equal dimension in each direction
what is a radical structure?
when molten metal is cooled quickly in a cylindrical mould
what is a fibrous structure?
when molten wire is pulled through a die
what is the difference between fast and slow cooling in crystal growth?
fast cooling (quenching)
* more nuclei
* small fine grains
slow cooling
* few nuclei
* large coarse grains
what are nucleating agents?
impurities or additives that act as foci for crystal growth
* the more added, the greater the number of small grains
what is a grain?
a single crystal (lattice) with atoms orientated in given directions (dendrites)
what is a grain boundary?
formed whenever there is a change in orientation of the crystal planes so the grains collide with each other
impurities and defects concentrate at the grain
what factors are required for rapid cooling (quenching)?
- small quantity of metal
- heat metal just above melting point before cooling
- store the metal in a mould that readily conducts heat
what is dislocation?
- when there is an imperfection/defect in a grain it is a dislocation (dislocation in the lattice)
- the dislocation area is most likely to be fractured when a force is applied
- the force pushes the dislocation along the lattice plane
- the defects propagates along the crystal plane until a grain boundary is reached
- the shape of the grain has changed and no dislocation is present
what mechanical properties does impeding movement of dislocations in metals and alloys increase?
- elastic limin stress
- fracture strength and UTS
- surface hardness
what mechanical properties does impeding movement of dislocations in metals and alloys decrease?
- ductility
- impact resistance
what factors impede dislocation movement?
- grain boundaries
- alloys - atoms of different sizes
- cold working - pushes dislocations towards teh grain boundaries
what is cold working?
- work done/pressure on a metal or alloy to change its shape by pushing defects towards the grain boundary
- done at low temperatures
- creates a harder and stronger material
what mechanical properties does cold working increase?
- elastic limit
- fracture stress
- hardness
what mechanical properties does cold working decrease?
- ductility
- impact strength
- lower corrosion strength
what is residual stress? how do you relive it?
- develop in metals/alloys where atoms become oriented out of equilibrium and grow with cold working
- undesirable - causes instability of the lattice and results in distortion of the metal/alloy over time
- relieved by annealing process
what is annealing?
a process whereby heating a metal/alloy so that greater thermal vibration allows migration of atoms so they can rearrange themselves - distortions are eliminated