Elementary characterization of Ti metal alloys used in implant dentistry

Authors

  • Catarina Alzira Montenegro Peddis Torres Federal University of Technology – Paraná, UTFPR
  • Sergei Anatolyevich Paschuk Federal University of Technology – Paraná, UTFPR
  • Janine Nicolosi Corrêa Federal University of Technology – Paraná, UTFPR
  • Valeriy Deniak Biotechnology applied to the health of children and adolescents /Pelé Pequeno Principe Research Institute - Paraná
  • Anna Silvia Setti Rocha Federal University of Technology – Paraná, UTFPR
  • Liliane Camargo Paranaense University, Umuarama – PR
  • Joaquim Teixeira de Assis Polytechnic Institute of Rio de Janeiro (IPRJ)/ State University of Rio de Janeiro – UERJ

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15392/bjrs.v7i2A.545

Keywords:

Dental implants, XRF, Alloy metal

Abstract

The main goal of present work is analytical characterization of standard dental implants broadly used by Brazilian dentists. An ideal biological alloy for dental implants must have very high biocompatibility, which means that such material should not provoke any serious adverse tissue response. Dental implants are generally marketed as commercially pure titanium (TiCP) due to their excellent mechanical and physical properties. However, sometimes other alloys are employed and consequently it is essential to study the chemical elements present in those alloys that could bring prejudice for the health. Present work investigated TiCP metal alloys used for dental implant manufacturing and evaluated the presence of elements. For alloy characterization and identification of elements it was used EDXRF technique. This method allows to perform the qualitative and quantitative analysis of the materials using the spectra of the characteristic X-rays emitted by the elements present in the metal samples. The experimental setup was based on two X- ray tubes, Mini X model with Ag and Au targets and X-123SDD detector (AMPTEK) and a 0.5 mm Cu collimator, developed due to specific sample geometrical and topography characteristics. Obtained results showed that implant alloys are not exactly TiCP but were manufactured using Ti-Al-V alloy, which contained Fe, Ni, Cu and Zn. The presence of such metals as Al and V in all studied samples shows very clear that studied implants were not manufactured from TiCP alloy. Moreover, according to the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM), these elements should not be present in TiCP.

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References

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Published

2019-02-06

Issue

Section

The Meeting on Nuclear Applications (ENAN)

How to Cite

Elementary characterization of Ti metal alloys used in implant dentistry. Brazilian Journal of Radiation Sciences, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, v. 7, n. 2A (Suppl.), 2019. DOI: 10.15392/bjrs.v7i2A.545. Disponível em: https://bjrs.org.br/revista/index.php/REVISTA/article/view/545. Acesso em: 24 dec. 2024.

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