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Amalgam

The document provides an overview of dental amalgam, including: 1) A brief history of dental amalgam from its introduction in 1833 to modern developments in alloys. 2) The basic constituents of dental amalgam including silver, tin, copper, and mercury. 3) Descriptions of the basic setting reactions of conventional low-copper alloys and admixed high-copper alloys. 4) Classifications and manufacturing processes are mentioned but not described in detail.
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
392 views59 pages

Amalgam

The document provides an overview of dental amalgam, including: 1) A brief history of dental amalgam from its introduction in 1833 to modern developments in alloys. 2) The basic constituents of dental amalgam including silver, tin, copper, and mercury. 3) Descriptions of the basic setting reactions of conventional low-copper alloys and admixed high-copper alloys. 4) Classifications and manufacturing processes are mentioned but not described in detail.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Dental Amalgam

Col Kraig S. Vandewalle


USAF Dental Evaluation & Consultation Service
Official Disclaimer
• The opinions expressed in this presentation are
those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the official position of the US Air Force or
the Department of Defense (DOD)
• Devices or materials appearing in this
presentation are used as examples of currently
available products/technologies and do not
imply an endorsement by the author and/or the
USAF/DOD
Overview
• History
• Basic composition
• Basic setting reactions
• Classifications
• Manufacturing
• Variables in amalgam
performance
Click here for briefing on dental amalgam (PDF)
History
• 1833
– Crawcour brothers introduce
amalgam to US
• powdered silver coins mixed with mercury
– expanded on setting
• 1895
– G.V. Black develops formula
for modern amalgam alloy
• 67% silver, 27% tin, 5% copper, 1% zinc
– overcame expansion problems
History
• 1960’s
– conventional low-copper lathe-cut alloys
• smaller particles
– first generation high-copper alloys
• Dispersalloy (Caulk)
– admixture of spherical Ag-Cu
eutectic particles with
conventional lathe-cut
– eliminated gamma-2 phase

Mahler J Dent Res 1997


History
• 1970’s
– first single composition spherical
• Tytin (Kerr)
• ternary system (silver/tin/copper)
• 1980’s
– alloys similar to Dispersalloy and Tytin
• 1990’s
– mercury-free alloys

Mahler J Dent Res 1997


Amalgam

• An alloy of mercury with another metal.


Why Amalgam?
• Inexpensive
• Ease of use
• Proven track record
– >100 years
• Familiarity
• Resin-free
– less allergies than composite
Click here for Talking Paper on Amalgam Safety (PDF)
Constituents in Amalgam
• Basic
– Silver
– Tin
– Copper
– Mercury
• Other
– Zinc
– Indium
– Palladium
Basic Constituents
• Silver (Ag)
– increases strength
– increases expansion
• Tin (Sn)
– decreases expansion
– decreased strength
– increases setting time

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Basic Constituents
• Copper (Cu)
– ties up tin
• reducing gamma-2 formation
– increases strength
– reduces tarnish and corrosion
– reduces creep
• reduces marginal deterioration

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Basic Constituents
• Mercury (Hg)
– activates reaction
– only pure metal that is liquid
at room temperature
– spherical alloys Click here for ADA Mercury
Hygiene Recommendations
• require less mercury
– smaller surface area easier to wet
» 40 to 45% Hg
– admixed alloys
• require more mercury
– lathe-cut particles more difficult to wet
» 45 to 50% Hg
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Other Constituents
• Zinc (Zn)
– used in manufacturing
• decreases oxidation of other elements
– sacrificial anode
– provides better clinical performance
• less marginal breakdown
– Osborne JW Am J Dent 1992
– causes delayed expansion with low Cu alloys
• if contaminated with moisture during condensation
– Phillips RW JADA 1954

H2O + Zn  ZnO + H2

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Other Constituents
• Indium (In)
– decreases surface tension
• reduces amount of mercury necessary
• reduces emitted mercury vapor
– reduces creep and marginal breakdown
– increases strength
– must be used in admixed alloys
– example
• Indisperse (Indisperse Distributing Company)
– 5% indium

Powell J Dent Res 1989


Other Constituents
• Palladium (Pd)
– reduced corrosion
– greater luster
– example
• Valiant PhD (Ivoclar Vivadent)
– 0.5% palladium

Mahler J Dent Res 1990


Basic Composition
• A silver-mercury matrix containing filler
particles of silver-tin
• Filler (bricks)
– Ag3Sn called gamma
• can be in various shapes
– irregular (lathe-cut), spherical,
or a combination
• Matrix
– Ag2Hg3 called gamma 1
• cement
– Sn8Hg called gamma 2
• voids

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Basic Setting Reactions
• Conventional low-copper alloys
• Admixed high-copper alloys
• Single composition high-copper alloys
Conventional Low-Copper Alloys
• Dissolution and precipitation
• Hg dissolves Ag and Sn Ag-Sn Alloy

from alloy Hg Hg

Ag Ag
• Intermetallic compounds
Sn
Ag
Sn
Ag-Sn Sn Ag-Sn
formed Alloy
Mercury
Alloy
(Hg)

Ag3Sn + Hg  Ag3Sn + Ag2Hg3 + Sn8Hg


  1 2
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Conventional Low-Copper Alloys

• Gamma () = Ag3Sn Hg

– unreacted alloy Ag-Sn Alloy

– strongest phase and Hg


Hg

Ag
corrodes the least Ag
Sn Ag
Sn
– forms 30% of volume Ag-Sn
Alloy
Sn Ag-Sn
Alloy
of set amalgam Mercury

Ag3Sn + Hg  Ag3Sn + Ag2Hg3 + Sn8Hg


  1 2
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Conventional Low-Copper Alloys
• Gamma 1 (1) = Ag2Hg3 Ag-Sn Alloy

– matrix for unreacted alloy


and 2nd strongest phase
1
– 10 micron grains Ag-Sn Ag-Sn
binding gamma () Alloy Alloy

– 60% of volume

Ag3Sn + Hg  Ag3Sn + Ag2Hg3 + Sn8Hg


  1 2
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Conventional Low-Copper Alloys
• Gamma 2 (2) = Sn8Hg
Ag-Sn Alloy
– weakest and softest phase
– corrodes fast, voids form
– corrosion yields Hg which
reacts with more gamma () Ag-Sn
Ag-Sn Alloy
– 10% of volume Alloy 2
– volume decreases with time
due to corrosion

Ag3Sn + Hg  Ag3Sn + Ag2Hg3 + Sn8Hg


  1 2
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Admixed High-Copper Alloys
• Ag enters Hg from Ag-Cu
spherical eutectic particles Ag-Cu Alloy

– eutectic
• an alloy in which the elements Hg Hg
Ag Ag Ag
are completely soluble in liquid
Ag
solution but separate into distinct Sn
Sn
areas upon solidification Ag-Sn Ag-Sn
Alloy Alloy
• Both Ag and Sn enter Hg Mercury

from Ag3Sn particles

Ag3Sn + Ag-Cu + Hg  Ag3Sn + Ag-Cu + Ag2Hg3 + Cu6Sn5


  1 
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Admixed High-Copper Alloys
• Sn diffuses to surface of

Ag-Cu particles Ag-Cu Alloy

– reacts with Cu to form


(eta) Cu6Sn5 ()
Ag-Sn
• around unconsumed Alloy
Ag-Sn
Alloy
Ag-Cu particles

Ag3Sn + Ag-Cu + Hg  Ag3Sn + Ag-Cu + Ag2Hg3 + Cu6Sn5


  1 
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Admixed High-Copper Alloys

• Gamma 1 (1) (Ag2Hg3)  Ag-Cu Alloy

surrounds () eta phase


(Cu6Sn5) and gamma ()
alloy particles (Ag3Sn) Ag-Sn Ag-Sn
Alloy Alloy
1

Ag3Sn + Ag-Cu + Hg  Ag3Sn + Ag-Cu + Ag2Hg3 + Cu6Sn5


  1 
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Single Composition
High-Copper Alloys
• Gamma sphere () (Ag3Sn)
with epsilon coating ()  Ag-Sn Alloy

(Cu3Sn) Sn Sn
Ag

• Ag and Sn dissolve in Hg Ag-Sn Alloy


Ag

Ag-Sn Alloy

Mercury (Hg)

Ag3Sn + Cu3Sn + Hg  Ag3Sn + Cu3Sn + Ag2Hg3 + Cu6Sn5


    1 
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Single Composition
High-Copper Alloys
• Gamma 1 (1) (Ag2Hg3) crystals
grow binding together partially- Ag-Sn Alloy
dissolved gamma () alloy 
particles (Ag3Sn)
• Epsilon () (Cu3Sn) develops Ag-Sn Alloy
crystals on surface of Ag-Sn Alloy
gamma particle (Ag3Sn)
in the form of eta () (Cu6Sn5) 1
– reduces creep
– prevents gamma-2 formation
Ag3Sn + Cu3Sn + Hg  Ag3Sn + Cu3Sn + Ag2Hg3 + Cu6Sn5
    1 
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Classifications
• Based on copper content
• Based on particle shape
• Based on method of adding
copper
Copper Content
• Low-copper alloys
– 4 to 6% Cu
• High-copper alloys
– thought that 6% Cu was maximum amount
• due to fear of excessive corrosion and expansion
– Now contain 9 to 30% Cu
• at expense of Ag

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Particle Shape
• Lathe cut • Spherical
– low Cu – low Cu
• New True • Cavex SF
Dentalloy – high Cu
– high Cu • Tytin, Valiant
• ANA 2000
• Admixture
– high Cu
• Dispersalloy, Valiant PhD
Method of Adding Copper
• Single Composition Lathe-Cut (SCL)
• Single Composition Spherical (SCS)
• Admixture: Lathe-cut + Spherical Eutectic (ALE)
• Admixture: Lathe-cut + Single Composition
Spherical (ALSCS)
Single Composition Lathe-Cut
(SCL)
• More Hg needed than spherical alloys
• High condensation force needed due to
lathe cut
• 20% Cu
• Example
– ANA 2000 (Nordiska Dental)
Single Composition Spherical
(SCS)
• Spherical particles wet easier with Hg
– less Hg needed (42%)
• Less condensation force, larger condenser
• Gamma particles as 20 micron spheres
– with epsilon layer on surface
• Examples
– Tytin (Kerr)
– Valiant (Ivoclar Vivadent)
Admixture:
Lathe-cut + Spherical Eutectic
(ALE)
• Composition
– 2/3 conventional lathe cut (3% Cu)
– 1/3 high Cu spherical eutectic (28% Cu)
– overall 12% Cu, 1% Zn
• Initial reaction produces gamma 2
– no gamma 2 within two years
• Example
– Dispersalloy (Caulk)
Admixture:
Lathe-cut + Single Composition
Spherical (ALSCS)
• High Cu in both lathe-cut and spherical
components
– 19% Cu
• Epsilon layer forms on both components
• 0.5% palladium added
– reinforce grain boundaries on gamma 1
• Example
– Valiant PhD (Ivoclar Vivadent)
Manufacturing Process
• Lathe-cut alloys
– Ag & Sn melted together
– alloy cooled
• phases solidify
– heat treat
• 400 ºC for 8 hours
– grind, then mill to 25 - 50 microns
– heat treat to release stresses of grinding

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Manufacturing Process
• Spherical alloys
– melt alloy
– atomize
• spheres form as particles cool
– sizes range from 5 - 40 microns
• variety improves condensability

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Material-Related Variables
• Dimensional change
• Strength
• Corrosion
• Creep
Dimensional Change
• Most high-copper amalgams undergo a
net contraction
• Contraction leaves marginal gap
– initial leakage
• post-operative sensitivity
– reduced with corrosion over time

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Dimensional Change
• Net contraction
– type of alloy
• spherical alloys have more
contraction
– less mercury
– condensation technique
• greater condensation = higher contraction
– trituration time
• overtrituration causes higher contraction

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Strength
• Develops slowly
– 1 hr: 40 to 60% of maximum
– 24 hrs: 90% of maximum
• Spherical alloys strengthen faster
– require less mercury
• Higher compressive vs. tensile strength
• Weak in thin sections
– unsupported edges fracture

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Corrosion
• Reduces strength
• Seals margins
– low copper
• 6 months
– SnO2, SnCl
– gamma-2 phase
– high copper
• 6 - 24 months
– SnO2 , SnCl, CuCl
– eta-phase (Cu6Sn5)

Sutow J Dent Res 1991


Creep
• Slow deformation of amalgam placed under
a constant load
– load less than that necessary to produce
fracture
• Gamma 2 dramatically affects creep rate
– slow strain rates produces plastic deformation
• allows gamma-1 grains to slide
• Correlates with marginal breakdown

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Creep
• High-copper amalgams have creep
resistance
– prevention of gamma-2 phase
• requires >12% Cu total
– single composition spherical
• eta (Cu6Sn5) embedded in gamma-1 grains
– interlock
– admixture
• eta (Cu6Sn5) around Ag-Cu particles
– improves bonding to gamma 1

Click here for table of creep values


Dentist-Controlled Variables
• Manipulation
– trituration
– condensation
– burnishing
– polishing
Trituration
• Mixing time
– refer to manufacturer
recommendations
• Click here for details
• Overtrituration
– “hot” mix
• sticks to capsule
– decreases working / setting time
– slight increase in setting contraction
• Undertrituration
– grainy, crumbly mix

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Condensation
• Forces
– lathe-cut alloys
• small condensers
• high force
– spherical alloys
• large condensers
• less sensitive to amount of force
• vertical / lateral with vibratory motion
– admixture alloys
• intermediate handling between lathe-cut and spherical
Burnishing
• Pre-carve
– removes excess mercury
– improves margin adaptation

• Post-carve
– improves smoothness
• Combined
– less leakage

Ben-Amar Dent Mater 1987


Early Finishing
• After initial set
– prophy cup with pumice
– provides initial smoothness to restorations
– recommended for spherical amalgams
Polishing
• Increased smoothness
• Decreased plaque retention
• Decreased corrosion
• Clinically effective?
– no improvement in marginal integrity
• Mayhew Oper Dent 1986
• Collins J Dent 1992
– Click here for abstract
Alloy Selection
• Handling characteristics
• Mechanical and physical
properties
• Clinical performance

Click here for more details


Handling Characteristics
• Spherical
– advantages
• easier to condense
– around pins
• hardens rapidly
• smoother polish
– disadvantages
• difficult to achieve tight contacts
• higher tendency for overhangs

Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003


Handling Characteristics
• Admixed
– advantages
• easy to achieve tight contacts
• good polish
– disadvantages
• hardens slowly
– lower early strength
Amalgam Properties
Compressive % Creep Tensile Strength
Strength (MPa) (24 hrs) (MPa)

Amalgam Type 1 hr 7 days

Low Copper1 145 343 2.0 60

Admixture2 137 431 0.4 48

Single 262 510 0.13 64


Composition3

1Fine Cut, Caulk


2 Dispersalloy,
Caulk
3Tytin, Kerr
Phillip’s Science of Dental Materials 2003
Survey of Practice Types
Civilian General Dentists

32%
Amalgam Amalgam
Free
Users

68%

Haj-Ali Gen Dent 2005


Frequency of Posterior Materials
by Practice Type
3% 7%

39%

Amalgam Users

51%

Amalgam Direct Composite Indirect Composite Other

12% 3%
8%
Amalgam Free

Haj-Ali Gen Dent 2005 77%


Profile of Amalgam Users
Civilian Practitioners
Do you use amalgam in Do you place fewer amalgams
your practice? than 5 years ago?

22% 12%
No No
Yes Yes

78%
88%

DPR 2005
Review of Clinical Studies
(Failure Rates in Posterior Permanent Teeth)
% Annual Failure
8

0
Amalgam Direct Comp Ceramic CAD/CAM Gold GI
Comp Inlays Inlays Inlays Inlays &
Onlays

Longitudinal Cross-Sectional

Hickel J Adhes Dent 2001


Review of Clinical Studies
(Failure Rates in Posterior Permanent Teeth)
% Annual Failure

15
Standard Deviation

10
Longitudinal and Cross-Sectional Data

a m p er
ys ys M ld GI nel
RT
g m m la la A o n A
al t Co po In In D/C
st G
Tu
Am rec m p ic A a
i Co Com ram C C
D
Ce Manhart Oper Dent 2004
Click here for abstract
Acknowledgements
• Dr. David Charlton
• Dr. Charles Hermesch
• Col Salvador Flores

Questions/Comments
Col Kraig Vandewalle
– DSN 792-7670
[email protected]

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