WROUGHT
ALLOYS AND
STAINLESS
STEEL                           1
       Presented by,
                       MARIA ALICIA ROY
 CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
HOW ALLOYS ARE MADE
USES
PROPERTIES
DEFORMATION OF METALS
COLD WORKING
ANNEALING
CARBON STEEL
WROUGHT GOLD ALLOYS
STAINLESS STEEL
TITANIUM ALLOYS
COBALT CHROMIUM NICKEL ALLOYS
REFERENCES
                                2
INTRODUCTION
 Metals are the major class of materials used for various applications in dentistry.
 Use of pure metal is limited in dentistry
 To optimize properties, most metals commonly used are mixture of two or more metallic
 elements
 Pure metals have properties that can be
  markedly different when alloyed with other
 metals and non metals.
eg: Fe +C ---much stronger and harder metal
               called steel
                                                                                          3
 Shaping of the metals are done by casting ,CAD-CAM milling or 3D printing
 An alternative method used is cold working in which metal is hammered, drawn or bent into shapes at
  temperature well below recrystallization temperature of metal.
 Metal or alloys produced in this way are called as
              WROUGHT METAL ALLOYS
                                                                                                        4
   ALLOYS
    • A metal made by combining two or more metallic elements
      to give greater strength or resistance to corrosion
 Alloys
 A metal made by combining two or more metallic elements to give greater strength or rAlloys
 A metal made by combining two or more metallic elements to give greater strength or resistance to corrosion
   WROUGHT ALLOYS
 Wrought metal alloys
 These are cold worked metals that are plastically deformed to bring about a change in shape of structure and their mechanical properties.
 (wrought: Beaten to shape.)
   • These are cold worked metals that are plastically deformed
 esistance to corrosion
      to bring about a change in shape of structure and their
      mechanical
 Wrought                properties.
             metal alloys
 These(wrought:
       are cold worked Beaten      to plastically
                       metals that are shape.)deformed to bring about a change in shape of structure and their mechanical properties.
 (wrought: Beaten to shape.)
                                                                                                                                         5
HOW WROUGHT ALLOYS ARE
MADE
    Mechanical
      work
                                                                        Cast metal alloys
                           Wrought                                      series of dies
                            alloy
                                                                  intermediate heat treatment
       Heat
    treatment
                                                                            round wires
Various deformative process like drawing, extruding, machining,
beating, rolling,forging
                                                                                                6
USES
 Orthodontic Wires
 Orthodontic Brackets
 Pre-fabricated Crowns
 Partial Denture Clasps
 Endodontic Files ,Reamers
 Surgical Instruments
 Mini Implants
 Posts
                              7
PROPERTIES
  Strength
  Stiffness
  Springback
  Resilience
  Formability
  Malleability
  Ductility
  Joinability
  Biocompatibility
                     8
STRENGTH
 It is the mechanical property of a material to resist induced stress without fracture or
 permanent deformation.
 It is mainly expressed in the stress –strain graph
 For every material ,the stress –strain graph can be prepared by gradually loading the material
 under standard testing machines and conditions
 The strain values, when the load is applied is measured
  and these are used to calculate the stress values.
                                                                                                   9
STRESS STRAIN GRAPH
             A –Proportional limit
             B-elastic limit
             C-yield strength
             D-ultimate tensile strength
             E- fracture point
                                           10
                 Proportional limit
It is the amount of stress required to produce elastic
             deformation of a material .
                     Elastic limit
   It is the maximum stress to which a material is
   subjected to and still capable of returning to its
                  original position.
               Modulus of elasticity
             Relative stiffness \rigidity
           Given by the slope of the curve
                                                    11
          Yield point
 Point from which permanent
     deformation begins
(material starts to yield stress)
       Yield strength
 Amount of stress required to
  produce a predetermined
 amount of permanent strain
                                    12
    Ultimate tensile strength
 It is the maximum amount of
stress a material can withstand
         without fracture
                                  13
RESILIENCE
Resilience is the ability of a material to absorb energy ,when it is deformed elastically ,and
release that energy upon unloading.
Often referred to as springback potential
Graphically ,the area under the horizontal linear part represents resilience.
                                                                                                 14
Toughness
It is the amount of energy
absorbed by the material
when it is stressed to a point
just short of its fracture point.
Represented by the entire area
under the stress-strain
diagram.
Measured by charpy and
izod test
                                    15
16
FORMABILITY
 The ease with which the material may be forced into a permanent change in shape
 In orthodontics, it is the ability to bend wires into desired configurations such as
loops, coils and stops without fracturing the wire
                                                                                         17
MALLEABILITY
 It is the ability to withstand permanent deformation under compressive forces without
 fracturing
                                                                                          18
DUCTILITY
 Amount of plastic deformation under tensile stress that an alloy can undergo before it
 fractures.
 Its magnitude is assessed by the amount of permanent deformation indicated by stress –strain
 graph.
                                                                                                 19
JOINABILITY
Ability
It        of plastic
   is the ability      to betoelongated
                  of a metal              or thinned
                                join with another    plastically
                                                  by means       without
                                                           of soldering or fracturin
                                                                           welding.
In Orthodontics , Auxillary components need to join with the
main component by means of soldering and welding
                                                                                       20
BIOCOMPATIBILITY
 Biocompatibility is primarily related to their corrosion
 Corrosion releases more of its elements in to the mouth increasing the risk for unwanted
 reactions
 THE MORE CORROSIVE THE METAL,THE LEAST BIOCOMPATIBLE
                                                                                             21
ARRANGEMENT OF ATOMS
 In general , materials can be subdivided into two categories based on their atomic
 arrangement.
          Crystalline
           • Periodic three dimensional arrangement of
             atoms
          Non crystalline
           • No long range periodicity
                                                                                       22
 metals always have a crystalline structure
 7 crystal systems
  1.   Cubic
  2.   Tetragonal
  3.   Orthorhombic
  4.   Rhombohedral
  5.   Hexagonal
  6.   Monoclinic
  7.   triclinic
                                               23
 It is convenient to visualize the crystal structure of metals in terms of their unit cell
 Unit cell – it is the smallest portion that is repeated in three dimensions to obtain a crystal
 structure or space lattice.
                                                                                                    24
LATTICE IMPERFECTIONS
     Crystalisation
       of metals
                      Random
                      growth
                               Lattice points
                               are vacant or
                               over crowded
                                                25
LATTICE IMPERFECTIONS
    Point defects   Line defects
                                   26
POINT DEFECTS
 Vacancy ,divacancy,interstitial atom
 These are equilibrium defects
 Material in equilibrium will contain various amount of these defects
                                                                         27
LINE DEFECTS
 Edge dislocation - lattice is regular except for the one plane of atoms that is discontinuous,
 forming “dislocation line” at the edge of the half plane.
                                                                                                   28
 If sufficiently large shear stress is applied,the bonds in the row adjacent to the dislocation will
 be broken and new bonds with the next row is formed
 Resulting in movement of dislocations by one atomic distance
 Continous application causes movement of dislocation till it reaches the boundary of the
 crystal.
                                                                                                        29
 Slip plane- plane along which dislocations occur
 Slip direction –direction in which atomic planes move
                                             Slip                      Slip
                Slip plane
                                          direction                   system
                    More number of slip system, more plastic is the material
                                                                               30
STRAIN HARDENING\WORK
HARDENING\COLD WORKING
 Permanent deformation of metal under mechanical stress at temperatures below their
 recrystallisation temperature
 Cold working produces number of point defects in the metal .
 These dislocations will interact with eachother mutually impeding the movements.
 Increased stress is required for further dislocation movement to continue the permanent
 deformation process
                                                                                            31
Surface hardness          Ductility
      UTS          Resistance to corrosion
 Yield strength
                                             32
DEFORMATION OF METALS
    Lattice                       Strain
                 Dislocations               fracture
 imperfections                  hardening
                                                       33
ANNEALING
 The effects associated with plastic deformation can be reversed by simply heating the metal to
 an appropriate elevated temperature without melting it .
 3 STAGES
             RECOVERY
             RECRYSTALLIZATION
             GRAIN GROWTH
                                                                                                   34
35
RECOVERY
 Cold worked properties begin to disappear.
 Slight decrease in tensile strength.
 No change in ductility.
 No changes in microscopic structure
 Clinically,cold worked orthodontic appliances are
   often subjected to stress –relief annealing prior
   to their placement.
                                                       36
RECRYSTALLISATION
 Radical change in the microstructure
 The old grains are replaced by new set of grains.
 The material attains its original soft and ductile condition.
 The fibrous structure is transformed to small grains
                                                                  37
GRAIN GROWTH
 Grain size range from fine to coarse
 Fine grain structure if annealed further, grains begin to grow
 Large grains consume smaller grains
 Grain growth process does not progress indefinitely to form single crystal
 Rather, an ultimate coarse grain structure is formed
                                                                               38
WROUGHT GOLD ALLOYS
                      39
 COMPOSITION
                gold     :11-15%
                copper : 11-15%
                silver    : 10-25%
                palladium: 5-10%
                platinum: 5-10%
                nickel: 1-2%
                zinc :1%
DENTAL APPLICATIONS OF GOLD ALLOYS
                • removable partial denture clasp.
                • orthodontic appliances.
                • retention pins for restoration
                                                     40
 Advantages
     1.       extremely formable
     2.   Strength can be increased by heat treatment as well as cold working
     3.   Low modulus of elasticity
     4.   Good joinability
     5.   Excellent biocompatibility
 Disadvantages
     1. Low yield strength
     2. Low springback
     3. High cost
     4. Gold in its pure state is very soft, malleable and ductile and cannot withstand high
        orthodontic forces.
                                                                                               41
CARBON STEEL
 Iron-based alloys usually containing < 2.1% Carbon
 Based on 3 possible lattice arrangements of iron, different classes of steels are:
            Ferrite
            Austinite
            Martensite
                                                                                       42
FERRITE
 Body centered cubic (BCC)
   Pure iron at room temperature
   Phase is stable in temperature not exceeding 912˚C
   Carbon has very low solubility in ferrite
                                                         43
AUSTENITE
 Face centered cubic (FCC)
 Stable form of iron at temperature between 912˚C & 1394˚C
   Maximum carbon solubility is 2.1% by weight
                                                              44
MARTENSITE
 Body centered tetragonal crystal structure.
 Produced by quenching of austenite to undergo spontaneous,
diffusionless transformation.
 This is a very strong brittle and hard alloy.
 The formation of martensite is actually a strengthening
mechanism of carbon steel.
                                                               45
STAINLESS STEEL
 Steel is an alloy of iron containing less than 1.2 percent carbon
 When chromium content of steel exceeds 11 percent, the alloy is referred to as
 stainless steel
 Introduced into orthodontics in 1950’s.
HISTORY
 First developed accidently by Harry Brearley in Sheffield, England
                                                                       47
 He tested this steel with nitric
acid ,lemon juice and tested
under microscope and found that
his alloys were highly resistant,
and immediately recognized
the potential for his steel within the
cutlery industry.
 He named it as ‘Rustless Steel’,
but Stuart, dubbed it ‘Stainless
Steel’ after testing the material in
a vinegar solution.
                                         48
 Stainless steel entered dentistry in 1919, introduced
 at Krupp’s dental poly clinic in Germany by F.
 Haupt Meyer.
 In 1930 Angle used it to make ligature wires
                                                          49
          MANUFACTURING OF STAINLESS STEEL
              INGOT
MELTING                                      DRAWING
            FORMATION        ROLLING
                                                       50
MELTING
The selection and melting of the components of alloys influence the physical
properties of wire .
                                                                               51
INGOT FORMATION
The molten metal is poured into the mold.
A non uniform chunk of metal is produced
The mechanical properties of the ingot is controlled by its granular structure
When the ingot is cooled, grains forms at once.
                                                                                  52
ROLLING (TURK’S HEAD APPARATUS)
First mechanical step in process.
Ingot is rolled in series of rollers to reduce its diameter.
Now the wire is actually an "distorted ingot".
The squeezing and rolling of ingot alters the shape and arrangement of the crystals
Rolling will cause the elongation crystals into an finger like process, closely meshed with
each other.
Hardness/ brittleness increases as the grain positions and arrangements are altered
The metal is annealed by heating into high temperature, which relives the internal stress
formed by rolling.
On cooling ,it resembles an original casting.
                                                                                              53
DRAWING
The wire is reduced to its final size by drawing.
This is a more precise process in which the wire is pulled through a small hole in a die.
Before it is reduced to orthodontic size a wire is drawn through many series of dies and
annealed several times along the way to relieve work hardening.
                                                                                            54
    The wires used in orthodontics are generally American
    Iron and Steel Institute {AISI} types 302 and 304
    austenitic stainless steels. These alloys are known as “18-
    8” Stainless steels, so designated because of the
    percentages of chromium and nickel in the alloy.
                                                                  55
PROPERTIES
When 12-30% chromium is added to steel it forms Stainless steel.
PASSIVATION- Chromium forms a very thin,transparent ,adherent layer
of oxide which acts as a barrier to diffusion of oxygen and other corrosive
species and prevents further corrosion of underlying alloy.
                                                                              56
 If this oxide layer is ruptured by mechanical or chemical
 means ,only a temperory loss of protection will occur, and the
 passivating layer eventually forms again in an oxidizing
 environment such as ambient air.
                     SENSITIZATION
 When austentic stainless steel is heated to between 400˚c
  and 900˚c
iron chromium carbides precipitate along the grain
boundaries and chromium is depleated near the grain
boundaries below concentrations required for protection
Thus ,it becomes susceptible to intergranular corrosion.
 Methods to reduce:
      • Reduce the carbon content.
      • Precipitate carbide along slip planes.
      • stabilization
                                                              58
STABILIZATION
 Elements such as titanium and tantalum ,which preferentially form
 carbides,can be added to the stainless steel to preserve the level of
 chromium when metal is exposed to elevated temperature.
 Ti has more affinity to form carbides than Cr making Cr free to
 react with oxygen.
 Such stanless steel are called as stabilized stainless steel
                                                                         59
TYPES OF STAINLESS STEEL
         FERRITE
       AUSTENITE
       MARTENSITE
                           60
FERRITIC STAINLESS STEEL
 It has BCC structure
 Composition:
      Chromium - 11.5% to 27%
      Carbon – 0.2%
      Nickel – 0%
 Properties:
    Provide good corrosion resistance.
    Not hardenable by heat treatment
    Not readily work hardenable.
    Little application in DENTISTRY.
                                          61
MARTENSITIC STAINLESS
STEEL
 BCT structure.
 Composition:
         Chromium – 11.5% to 17%
         Nickel – 0% to 2.5%
         Carbon – 0.15% to 1.2%
 Properties
        High strength and Hardness
       Can be heat treated
       Has less corrosion resistance than other types of stainless steels
 Used for surgical and cutting instruments
                                                                             62
AUSTENITIC STAINLESS STEEL
 FCC structure.
   This alloy is also called as 18-8 stainless steel
 Most corrosion resistant metal.
 Used for orthodontic wires , endodontic instruments, crowns in pediatric
  dentistry.
 AISI 304 and 302
 Type 316L (contains carbon – 0.03% maximum) is the type usually used for
  implants.
                                                                             63
                     Austenite
     18-8 stainless steel used in orthodontic
        stainless steel wires and brackets
 AISI 304                   AISI 302(basic alloy)
18-20%chromium               17-19% chromium
  8-12% nickel
            0.08%             8-10% nickel
       carbon                  0.15% carbon
                                                    64
COMPARING AUSTENITIC OVER FERRITIC
STAINLESS STEEL
Austenitic stainless steel has,
• Greater ductility & ability to undergo more cold work without fracturing
• Substantial strengthening during cold working
• Greater ease of welding
• Ability to overcome sensitization
• Less Critical Grain Growth
• Comparative ease in forming
                                                                             65
AUSTRALIAN STAINLESS
STEEL
 Developed by A J WILCOCK and RAYMOND BEGG
 The following properties made it superior to stainless steel:
  1. Increased yield strength
  2. Spring back property is more than stainless steel
  3. No loss of force even when the wire is used for long period of time
                                                                           66
 These wires are mainly used in beggs light wire technique
 Available in various grades(in order of increasing yield strength)
     Regular
    Regular Plus
    Special
    Special Plus
    Premium
    Premium Plus
    supreme
                                                                       67
TITANIUM ALLOYS
 Titanium is a low density , strong ,lustrous ,corrosion resistant metal with a silver color.
 Discovered by WILLIAM GREGOR in 1791
 It can be alloyed with other elements to produce strong but light weighed alloys
 Although it is strong as steel ,it is 45% lighter
                                                                                                 68
 Various alloys of titanium used in orthodontics are
        1.Nickel –titanium
        2.Alpha titanium
        3.Beta titanium
        4.Titanium –niobium
        5.Titanium -vanadium
                                                        69
NICKEL TITANIUM ALLOYS
The term nitinol is derived from its composition and its place of discovery
     (Nickel Titanium-Naval Ordnance Laboratory).
William J. Buehler along with Frederick Wang, discovered its properties during
research at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory in 1959.
This alloy was introduced in dentistry by ANDERSON in 1972
                                                                                 70
  Composition:
           Nickel – 54%
           Titanium – 44%
           Cobalt- 2% or less
Types
      Nitinol (Conventional)
      Chinese NiTi
      Japanese NiTi(Pseudo
       elastic)
      Copper NiTi (Thermo elastic)
                                      71
Nitinol alloy can exist in various crystallographic forms:
•Austenitic phase – BCC lattice, exists at high
                        temperatures & stable form
•Martensitic phase – Close packed Hexagonal lattice,
                              exists at room temperature
Transformation between austenitic and martensitic forms of NiTi
can be induced by both temperature and stress
                                                                  72
 TRANSITION TEMPERATURE RANGE (TTR)
  TTR is certain temperature where the alloy changes from one form to another.
For pure substances the melting point can be defined as a precise value.
Considering the body temperature as a reference,
a TTR above the body temperature renders the alloy austenitic ( i.e. more rigid ),
and
a TTR below the body temperature renders it martensitic (i.e.superelastic ).
 
               The transformation from austenite to martensite and the reverse
do not take place at same temperature but within a range of temperature. This
difference is known as ‘HYSTERESIS’. The range for most binary alloys (NiTi)
is 400 – 600.
                                                                                     73
 If the TTR is below the body temperature, the wire remains set in
 some intermediate shape and regains its original shape if heated.
 This process is accompanied by the release of energy
 For thermally activated purposes the most commonly used third
 metals are copper and cobalt because they reduce hysteresis and
 bring the TTR close to the oral temperature.
 In addition to Cu small amounts of Al, Zr, Cr or Fe are beneficial
 for improving the strength of the martensitic form. It has been
 claimed that the addition of Cu allows an easier engagement of the
 arch wire and delivers higher forces.
                                                                       74
SHAPE MEMORY
 SHAPE MEMORY can be defined as the ability of material to
 remember its original shape after being plastically deformed.
 In a typical application, a certain shape is set while the alloy is
 maintained at an elevated temp. (Above the transition temperature).
 When the alloy is cooled below the TTR it can be plastically
 deformed, but when it is heated again the original shape is restored.
 This property is called “THEMO ELASTICITY”.
                                                                         75
SUPERELASTICITY
 Ability of wire to sustain or deliver near constant force over a wide range of activation.
 Instead of temperature, stress is used to bring about change in crystalline structure.
 Martensitic transformation begins when external force is applied .when force is
 relieved ,it transforms into austenitic form.
                                                                                               76
CLASSIFICATIONS
 
NiTi orthodontic wires are generally classified as
 Non-Super elastic
 Super elastic
 
NON-SUPER ELASTIC
              – The original Nitinol developed in the early 1960s is a stabilised form of the alloy
in which work hardening has abolished the phase transformation. The alloy does not exhibit a
shape memory effect, but the low modulus of elasticity and the high working range make Nitinol
useful when considerable deflections are necessary.
 
SUPER ELASTIC
            - The more advanced alloys Chinese NiTi and Japanese NiTi have different transition
temperatures than Nitinol and present a phase transformation.
 
                                                                                                      77
USES
DENTISTRY
         Orthodontic wires
         Endodontic files
MEDICAL USES
         Anchors for tendon fixation
         Stents for cardiovascular application
AEROSPACE AND NAVAL APPLICATION
                                                  78
COPPER NiTi
Introduced in 1994 by Dr. Rohit Sachdeva.
Quartenary alloy
   1.   Nickel
   2.   Titanium
   3.   Copper
   4.   Chromium
 Copper
    Increases strength
    Reduces hysteresis
    These benefits occur at expense of increasing TTR above that of the oral cavity
 Chromium:
   - To compensate for the above mentioned unwanted effect 0.5% chromium is added to return TTR close to
   the oral temperature.
Has both superelastic and shape memory properties.
                                                                                                           79
    ADVANTAGES OF Cu-NiTi OVER TRADITIONAL NiTi ALLOYS
More resistant to permanent deformation
Exhibit better springback properties
Smaller loading force for same degree of deformation
Generates more constant force over long activation spans
                                                            80
                                    CHINESE NiTi
C. J. BURSTONE ( AJO JUNE 1985 )
Chinese NiTi wire has much lower transitional temperature than NiTi wire.
It has
  1.4 times the spring back of nitinol wires
  4.6 times the spring back of SS wires
CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE
  1. Applicable in situations where large deflections are required.
  2. When tooth are badly malpositoned.
  3. Niti wire deformation is not time dependent
                                                                             81
                                    Japanese NiTi
 Fujio Miura et al ( AJODO July 1986 )
Superelasticity is produced by stress ,not by temperature change and hence is called
 stress induced martensitic transformation (SIM)(pseudoelastic)
Properties
1. High spring back.
2. Shape memory.
3. Super elasticity.
USES
• Alignment of badly malposed teeth
• Distalize the molar
• Expansion of arch
• Gain/Close the space
• Periodontally compromised patients                                                    82
                          β-TITANIUM
 Termed as Titanium-Molybdenum Alloys (TMA)
 Dr. Charles burstone and Jon Goldberg
Composition:
  Titanium – 77.8%
   Molybdenum – 11.3%
   Zirconium – 6.6%
   Tin – 4.3%
                                               83
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF β-TITANIUM ALLOYS
                     Only Orthodontic wire possessing true weldability
 High elasticity
 Low stiffness
 Excellent Formability
 Ease of joining
 Highly ductile
 Excellent tarnish and corrosion resistance
 Biocompatible and stable in oral environment
                                                                         84
Clinical uses
  Retraction mechanics –
              low stiffness allows larger wires to be used earlier in treatment with less   patient
 pain and discomfort
 Space closure               -
            high formability allows fabrication of loops ,helices and complicated bends
  Correction of rotations and root movements –
             specialized springs or auxiliaries for rotations,space closure and root movements
 can easily be welded directly to the wires
  Torque
              because of their ductility ,these wires can easily be twisted
                                                                                                      85
TITANIUM-NIOBIUM
                            Advantages
   Composition
                            No leaching of Nickel.
•   Titanium- 82%
                            Biocompatible.
•   Molybdenum-15%
•   Niobium- 3%
                            Clinical implications
    Properties
                            Finishing wire with multiple bends
 Easy to bend.
                            Fixed retainers
 Formability
 Yield strength--- < SS.
 Stiffness ---¼ of SS.
                                                                 86
ΑLPHA- TITANIUM
Composition
                            88.9% titanium
                           7.86% Aluminum
                           4.05% Vanadium
Stable form of pure titanium at temperatures below 885 C
Aluminum, carbon, oxygen and nitrogen stabilize the a-titanium structure.
Poor springback characteristics
Mainly used for dental implants and cast restorations
                                                                             87
COBALT-CHROMIUM NICKEL
ALLOY
 COMPOSITION
            Cobalt       40%
            Chromium     20%
          Nickel       15%
           Molybdenum 07%
           Manganese  02%
             Carbon      0.016%
             Beryllium   0.04%
             Iron         15.8%
Also known as ELGILOY.
                                   88
PROPERTIES
 Excellent formability in its non-heat treated form
 Greater resistance to fatigue and distortion than stainless steel because of its
 resiliency
 Can be soldered and welded easily
 Excellent resistance to tarnish and corrosion
 Biocompatible
USES
1.   Orthodontic wires
2.   Orthodontic brackets
                                                                                     89
 In order of their levels of hardness,they are available in
 four tempers in color coded packs:
   1. Blue elgiloy(soft)
   2. Yellow eligiloy(ductile)
   3. Green eligiloy(semi-resilient)
   4. Red eligiloy(resilient)
                                                               90
CONCLUSION
In the last few decades, a variety of new alloys has been introduced into
orthodontics.
Appropriate use of all the available wire types may enhance patient comfort
and reduce chairside time and the duration of treatment.
The restricted use of only stainless steel wires to treat an entire case from start
to finish therefore may be indicated only in a few patients.
It may be beneficial instead to exploit the desirable qualities of a particular
wire type that is specifically selected to satisfy the demands of the presenting
clinical situation.
This, in turn, would provide the most optimal and efficient treatment results.
                                                                                      91
REFERENCES
 Phillips' Science of Dental Materials By Kenneth J. Anusavice
 Materials used in dentistry by S Mahalaxmi
 Orthodontic Material Scientific and clinical aspect, William A Branley,Theodor Eliades
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THANK YOU
            93