Fretting corrosion behaviour of ball-and-socket joint on dental implants with different prosthodontic alloys

Biomed Mater Eng. 2003;13(1):27-34.

Abstract

The fretting corrosion of five materials for implant suprastructures (cast-titanium, machined-titanium, gold alloy, silver-palladium alloy and chromium-nickel alloy), was investigated in vitro, the materials being galvanically coupled to a titanium ball-and-socket-joint with tetrafluoroethylene under mechanical load. Various electrochemical parameters (E(corr), i(corr), Evans diagrams, polarization resistance and Tafel slopes) were analyzed. The microstructure of the different dental materials was observed before and after corrosion processes by optical and electron microscopy. It can be observed that the mechanical load produces an important decrease of the corrosion resistance. The cast and machined titanium had the most passive current density at a given potential and chromium-nickel alloy had the most active critical current density values. The high gold content alloys have excellent resistance corrosion, although this decreases when the gold content is lower in the alloy. The palladium alloy had a low critical current density due to the presence of gallium in this composition but a selective dissolution of copper-rich phases was observed through energy dispersive X-ray analysis.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study
  • Evaluation Study
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biocompatible Materials / chemistry
  • Corrosion*
  • Dental Alloys / chemistry*
  • Dental Implants*
  • Electrochemistry / methods
  • Equipment Failure Analysis / methods
  • Materials Testing / methods*
  • Prosthesis Failure
  • Saliva / chemistry*
  • Surface Properties
  • Weight-Bearing

Substances

  • Biocompatible Materials
  • Dental Alloys
  • Dental Implants