research article
Does Electropolishing Improve the Low-cycle Fatigue Behavior of a Nickel-Titanium Rotary Instrument in Hypochlorite?
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare the low-cycle fatigue (LCF) behavior of electropolished and nonelectropolished nickel-titanium (NiTi) instruments of the same design in hypochlorite. Forty-five electropolished and 62 nonelectropolished NiTi engine files were subjected to rotational bending at various curvatures in 1.2% hypochlorite solution. Number of revolutions to failure, crack-initiation sites, extent of slow crack extension into the fracture cross-section, and surface-strain amplitude were noted. A linear relationship was found between LCF life and surface-strain amplitude for both groups, with no discernible difference between the two (p > 0.05). No electropolished instrument showed more than one crack origin, significantly fewer than for the nonelectropolished instruments (p < 0.05). The square root of crack extension and strain amplitude were inversely related. Although surface smoothness is enhanced by electropolishing, this did not protect the instrument from LCF failure. © 2007 American Association of Endodontists.link_to_subscribed_fulltex- Article
- Breakage
- corrosion
- cracking
- fatigue
- fracture
- nickel-titanium
- root canal instruments
- Dental Alloys - chemistry
- Dental Polishing - methods
- Disinfectants - chemistry
- Equipment Design
- Equipment Failure
- Humans
- Materials Testing
- Nickel - chemistry
- Root Canal Preparation - instrumentation
- Rotation
- Sodium Hypochlorite - chemistry
- Stress, Mechanical
- Surface Properties
- Titanium - chemistry