US3929475A - Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy having superior improved ductility and work hardening characteristics - Google Patents

Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy having superior improved ductility and work hardening characteristics Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3929475A
US3929475A US494565A US49456574A US3929475A US 3929475 A US3929475 A US 3929475A US 494565 A US494565 A US 494565A US 49456574 A US49456574 A US 49456574A US 3929475 A US3929475 A US 3929475A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
bal
alloy
alloys
silver
work hardening
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US494565A
Inventor
Clyde E Ingersoll
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Williams Gold Refining Co Inc
WILLIAMS GOLD REFINING CO
Original Assignee
WILLIAMS GOLD REFINING CO
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by WILLIAMS GOLD REFINING CO filed Critical WILLIAMS GOLD REFINING CO
Priority to US494565A priority Critical patent/US3929475A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3929475A publication Critical patent/US3929475A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C5/00Alloys based on noble metals
    • C22C5/06Alloys based on silver
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K6/00Preparations for dentistry
    • A61K6/80Preparations for artificial teeth, for filling teeth or for capping teeth
    • A61K6/84Preparations for artificial teeth, for filling teeth or for capping teeth comprising metals or alloys
    • A61K6/844Noble metals

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT 52 U.S. Cl 75 173 R; 75/134 N; 75/172 G An alloy comprising 10-60% 2-1 of at least [51] Int. Cl. C22C 5/06 one member of the g p consisting of CT, [58] Field of S r h 75/173 R, 172 G 134 N and Zn, the balance silver having improved tarnish resistance meeting the Vickers hardness requirements of [56] Ref r n Cit d the American Dental Association Specification 5 for UNITED STATES PATENTS dental castings, which has superior ductility and work 1,229,037 6/1917 Cooper 75 173 R hardemng charactensncs' 1,999,866 4/1935 Capillon et a1. 75/172 G 6 Claims, No Drawings US. Pat. application Ser. No. 494,566, filed of even date by the same inventor, is directed to a related silver based alloy useful in the dental and jewelry arts.
  • This invention relates to silver palladium alloys employed in the dental and jewelry arts which are resistant to tarnishing and which have superior ductility and work hardening characteristics and which meet the requirements of the American Dental Association (ADA) Specification 5 for dental castings.
  • ADA American Dental Association
  • Gold alloys have long been used in the dental arts for restorative appliances.
  • Soft alloys of gold with small amounts of silver and/or copper were used in earlier times .for simple one-surface inlays, where the restoration was surrounded by tooth structure. However, for two or three surface inlays or full crowns, soft alloys of 20K or 22K were not strong enough. More complicated alloys were used to meet the strength requirements.
  • Copper was employed as a strengthening ingredient, silver was used to dilute the gold and produce a cheaper alloy, zinc and/or indium was used as an oxygen scavenger. Palladium and platinum were also used for strengthening, color control and corrosion resistance, the palladium also serving to lower the cost.
  • the present invention comprises alloys of silver and palladium containing at least one member of the group of Cr, Fe, In, Sn and Zn having good ductility and work hardening characteristics and improved tarnish resistance.
  • An object of the invention is to provide a silver based alloy having an improved tarnish resistance.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a silver based alloy having sufficient strength to be employed for dental and jewelry uses.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide an alloy having sufficient ductility to enable dental constructions formed therefrom to be burnished or adjusted without fracturing.
  • a further object is to provide a silver based alloy having lowered work hardening characteristics whereby rolling of alloy bars into strips can be accomplished without excessive strain relief heat treatments.
  • a further object is to provide a silver based alloy having improved tarnish resistance, improved ductility and lessened work hardening characteristics without loss of properties necessary for casting, such as fluidity for filling a mold completely and for polishing.
  • Pd 10-60 15-30 At least one of the group consisting of Cr, Fe, ln, Sn and Zn .2-10 .5-10
  • a numerical scale was established by exposing pure silver bars to ammonium sulfide for times ranging from 0 to seconds, giving a scale of 0 for no exposure to 10, almost black. In making the test, a portion of the test bar was covered so that the exposed portion and unexposed portion could be directly compared.
  • Dental 4 amalgam rated 9 on this scale, an alloy of 75 silver-25 TABLE II palladium rated 5.
  • An ADA certified gold alloy rated between and l and was assigned '22. To be acceptable ADDED PERCENT ADDED.
  • TARNISH RATING for dental work of the type covered in ADA specifica- ELEMENT tslOsl'l 5, the tarnish rating should be no higher than about 288: to 7% i Cobalt 7% 5 Chromium .2-2.9+ 2-5 HARDENING Copper 4 to 22 3-5 Iron 1-6 2-5 Elements in addition to copper may be employed to Indium up to 4% 1-2 harden a silver-based alloy containing palladium.
  • a I l 2 1 5; partial list of elements is given in Table I, along with the 3235: 2 hardness obtained by adding them to an alloy contain- Tungsten 1 to 74 ing 75% Ag, 25% Pd.
  • the 0.1% offset yield strength was used as the comparable property.
  • the Vickers hardness shown Improved Sulfide tarnish resistance is gi n in a l in the table is for a silver base alloy of this invention II by the addition of the enumerated elements to a 35 having the same 0.1% offset yield strength as the ADA g, 25% Pd y: specification 5 Type alloys.
  • An alloy consisting essentially of about 15-30% Pd, about 02-10% of an element of the group consisting of Cr, Fe, and In and mixtures thereof and the balance Ag.
  • the alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 23.5% Pd, about .1% Fe and the balance Ag.
  • the alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 25% Pd, about 3.5% In and the balance Ag.
  • the alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 24.25% Pd, about 0.75% Fe, about 0.9% Sn, about 6% Zn and the balance Ag.
  • the alloy of claim 1 further including from about 02-10% of an element of the group consisting of Sn and Zn and mixtures thereof.

Abstract

An alloy comprising 10-60% Pd, 0.2-10% of at least one member of the group consisting of Cr, Fe, In, Sn and Zn, the balance silver having improved tarnish resistance meeting the Vickers hardness requirements of the American Dental Association Specification 5 for dental castings, which has superior ductility and work hardening characteristics.

Description

United States Patent 11 1 Ingersoll Dec. 30, 1975 [54] TARNISH RESISTANT SILVER BASED 2,070,271 2/1937 DENTAL CASTING ALLoY HAVING SUPERIOR IMPROVED DUCTILITY AND 3,155,467 11/1964 Yamamoto et al. 75/173 R X WORK HARDENING CHARACTERISTICS 3,411,900 11/1968 Roeder et a1. 75 173 c [75] Inventor: glygle E. Ingersoll, Tonawanda, FOREIGN PATENTS QR APPLICATIONS 628,572 4/1936 Germany 75/173 R [73] Assignee: Williams Gold Refining Company Incorporated, Buffalo, NY. Primary ExaminerL. Dewayne Rutledge Assistant Examiner-E. L. Weise [22] Filed 1974 Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Christel & Bean [21] Appl. No.: 494,565
[57] ABSTRACT 52 U.S. Cl 75 173 R; 75/134 N; 75/172 G An alloy comprising 10-60% 2-1 of at least [51] Int. Cl. C22C 5/06 one member of the g p consisting of CT, [58] Field of S r h 75/173 R, 172 G 134 N and Zn, the balance silver having improved tarnish resistance meeting the Vickers hardness requirements of [56] Ref r n Cit d the American Dental Association Specification 5 for UNITED STATES PATENTS dental castings, which has superior ductility and work 1,229,037 6/1917 Cooper 75 173 R hardemng charactensncs' 1,999,866 4/1935 Capillon et a1. 75/172 G 6 Claims, No Drawings US. Pat. application Ser. No. 494,566, filed of even date by the same inventor, is directed to a related silver based alloy useful in the dental and jewelry arts.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to silver palladium alloys employed in the dental and jewelry arts which are resistant to tarnishing and which have superior ductility and work hardening characteristics and which meet the requirements of the American Dental Association (ADA) Specification 5 for dental castings.
2. Description of the Prior Art Gold alloys have long been used in the dental arts for restorative appliances. Soft alloys of gold with small amounts of silver and/or copper were used in earlier times .for simple one-surface inlays, where the restoration was surrounded by tooth structure. However, for two or three surface inlays or full crowns, soft alloys of 20K or 22K were not strong enough. More complicated alloys were used to meet the strength requirements. Copper was employed as a strengthening ingredient, silver was used to dilute the gold and produce a cheaper alloy, zinc and/or indium was used as an oxygen scavenger. Palladium and platinum were also used for strengthening, color control and corrosion resistance, the palladium also serving to lower the cost.
As the price of gold increased, cobalt and nickel base alloys were introduced for partial denture use. Silver alloys of platinum or palladium were tried but did not prove successful. However, it was difficult to make precision casts for crowns and inlays from cobalt and nickel base alloys and gold alloys continued to be used for these purposes.
Efforts to substitute silver base alloys for gold base alloys continued. US. Pat. No. 2,198,400 shows an alloy containing silver, palladium and hardened with copper and including a small percentage of gold, with zinc as a scavenger. However, as US Pat. No. 2,259,668 points out, copper present in large quantities causes brittleness. Since dental alloys are furnished to the dentist or dental laboratory in the form of wrought pieces, they should be workable by rolling. The prior art alloys, which contain copper as a strengthener, work harden very rapidly. Thus, only a small amount of reduction by rolling can be achieved after each strain relief treatment. In addition, brittle alloys are often undesirable from the point of view of dental technique. In many instances, the dentist must burnish crown margins to give better adptation after cementation. Brittle margins are likely to break off during the burnishing operation.
A further problem with silver dental alloys is the ease with which they tarnish. US Pat. No. 2,196,303; 2,196,304 and 2,259,668 state that zinc and cadmium improve the tarnish resistance of the silver alloys shown, all of which contain large percentages of copper.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention comprises alloys of silver and palladium containing at least one member of the group of Cr, Fe, In, Sn and Zn having good ductility and work hardening characteristics and improved tarnish resistance.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION An object of the invention is to provide a silver based alloy having an improved tarnish resistance.
Another object of the invention is to provide a silver based alloy having sufficient strength to be employed for dental and jewelry uses.
Another object of the invention is to provide an alloy having sufficient ductility to enable dental constructions formed therefrom to be burnished or adjusted without fracturing.
A further object is to provide a silver based alloy having lowered work hardening characteristics whereby rolling of alloy bars into strips can be accomplished without excessive strain relief heat treatments.
A further object is to provide a silver based alloy having improved tarnish resistance, improved ductility and lessened work hardening characteristics without loss of properties necessary for casting, such as fluidity for filling a mold completely and for polishing.
Yet a further object is to provide a silver based alloy of improved characteristics for dental and jewelry uses comprising:
Element Broad range, Preferred range,
Pd 10-60 15-30 At least one of the group consisting of Cr, Fe, ln, Sn and Zn .2-10 .5-10
Ag Rest Rest Further objects of the invention will become apparent from the following description and claims.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION TARNISH RESISTANCE Publication No. 31,008 of the Department of Commerce dated Sept. 23, 1927 gives the results of tests on the tamishability of silver-based alloys. According to the publication, the alloys were exposed to sodium polysulfide for a period of 8 minutes and the discoloration noted. In the present case, this test was modified by substituting ammonium sulfide, which was found to give more reproducible results. In the corrosion tests employed, cast bar specimens were prepared by first grinding and polishing by normal metallurgical methods, followed by sand blasting the surface to be exposed to ammonium sulfide for 8 minutes.
A numerical scale was established by exposing pure silver bars to ammonium sulfide for times ranging from 0 to seconds, giving a scale of 0 for no exposure to 10, almost black. In making the test, a portion of the test bar was covered so that the exposed portion and unexposed portion could be directly compared. Dental 4 amalgam rated 9 on this scale, an alloy of 75 silver-25 TABLE II palladium rated 5. An ADA certified gold alloy rated between and l and was assigned '22. To be acceptable ADDED PERCENT ADDED. TARNISH RATING for dental work of the type covered in ADA specifica- ELEMENT tslOsl'l 5, the tarnish rating should be no higher than about 288: to 7% i Cobalt 7% 5 Chromium .2-2.9+ 2-5 HARDENING Copper 4 to 22 3-5 Iron 1-6 2-5 Elements in addition to copper may be employed to Indium up to 4% 1-2 harden a silver-based alloy containing palladium. A I l 2 1 5; partial list of elements is given in Table I, along with the 3235: 2 hardness obtained by adding them to an alloy contain- Tungsten 1 to 74 ing 75% Ag, 25% Pd.
TABLE I l 5 ADDED PERCENTAGE VICKERS HARDNESS It was found that in the case of some of the elements which in lower concentrations had the effect of improv- ELEMENT ADDED None 70 mg sulfide tarnlsh resistance had the opposite effect on Cobalt 10 120 higher concentrations. Thus, adding 25% indium to ggrg g produce an alloy having 135 Vickers rating resulted in Copper 22 245 unacceptable tarnish number of 7. 6 4 127 It has been discovered that employment in a silverermanlurn 2.2 103 H f i 4 104 palladium alloy of certain elements and combinations Indium 4% 160 thereof in specific ranges results in alloys having immgi gggsfi i 23 25 proved ductility, work hardening characteristics and Nickel 11 130 resistance to tarnishing. These elements are broadly El 1 3g chromium, iron, indium, tin and zinc and, more prefer- Titanium 140 ably indium, tin and zinc. Vanadium 01 92 Since hardness is not translatable from one alloy 2:25 1 g; system to another, some other mechanical property Zirconium 4 132 must be employed to compare different systems. In the present case, the 0.1% offset yield strength was used as the comparable property. The Vickers hardness shown Improved Sulfide tarnish resistance is gi n in a l in the table is for a silver base alloy of this invention II by the addition of the enumerated elements to a 35 having the same 0.1% offset yield strength as the ADA g, 25% Pd y: specification 5 Type alloys.
TABLE III TYPE 01% OFFSET YIELD VICKERS HARDNESS STRENGTH (ADA Specification No. 5) (Gold or Silver based alloy) (Silver base alloy) I 20900-21500 psi 235-105 H 27,50036,000 psi 105-145 Ill 36,000-44,500 psi 145-200 IV 44,500+ 200+ These values are all in the "as cast" condition.
Examples of alloys for Type I (HV -105) are listed in Table IV:
TABLE IV Alloy Cold No Ag Pd Cr Fe In Sn Zn HV Tamish Reduction 1 B211 2395 85 3 2 Bal 23.35 1 l 97 3 90%+ 3 Bal 23.50 I 105 2 90%+ 4 Ba! 25 2 86 2 90%+ 5 Hal 25 3 99 2 90%+ 6 Ba] 25 1 90 2 90%+ 7 Ba] 25 l 97 2 90%+ 8 Ba] 24.5 25 44 .33 .22 3 90%+ 9 Ba] 24.5 l l 91 5 90%+ I0 Bal 24.5 1 l 98 4 90%+ ll Bal 24.5 l l 90 4 90%+ Examples of alloys for Type II (HV -145) are listed in Table V:
TABLE V Allo Cold No. Ag Pd Cr Fe In Sn Zn HV Tamish Reduction 1 Bal 22.6 1.6 120 3 2 Bal 21.7 2.2 4 90%+ 3 Bal 20.65 2.9 126 4 90% 4 Bal 22 -2 3 90%|- 5 Bal l9 4 128 4 90%+ 6 Bal 25 3.5 120 2 90% 7 Bal 25 2 140 2 86% 8 Bal 25 2 2 87% 9 Bal 24.5 .25 l 113 3 89% 1O Bal 24 .5 .5 113 3 90%+ ll Bal 24 .5 2 114 3 90%+ l2 Bal 24 1 l 3 90% 13' Bal 24.25 2 l 4.5 90% 14 Bal 24 3 l 130 4 90%+ 15 Bal 24 2 l l 141 4 89% Examples of alloys for Table III (I-IV 145-200) are listed m Table VI: TABLE VIII continued TABLE VI Alloy Cold No. Ag Pd Cr Fe In Sn Zn HV Tamish Reduc.
l Bal l9 6 148 5 70% 2 Bal 25 4 150 1 89% 3 Hal 25 6 186 4.5 62% 4 Bal 25 4 4 58% 5 Bal 24.75 .25 1.1 .82 .55 162 3 89% 6 Bal 24.50 .5 .18 1.08 .72 173 3 80% 7 Bal 24.25 .75 .9 6 182 3 89% 8 Bal 24 1 1.1 .82 .55 191 4 77% 9 Bal 24.25 l l l 150 4.5 89% 10 Bal 24 1 l 2 160 4 65% ll Bal 23.75 2 3 4.5 51% 12 Bal 23.5 5 l 195 4 58% 13 Bal 23.25 4 3 184 4.5 56% 14 Bal 23 4 4 183 4.5 40% 15 Bal 22.5 l 4 5 155 5.5 35% Examples of alloys for Type IV (l-IV 200+) are listed RANGES OF ELEMENTS OF THE SILVER BASED ALLOY (PERCENT) Table VIII Cr, Fe, In, Sn, Zn .2-10 .540
TABLE VI] A110 Cold No. Ag Pd Cr Fe In Sn Zn HV Tamish Reduc.
1 Bal 25 4 206 4 86% 2 Ball 24.75 .25 1.76 1.32 .88 204 4 64% 3 Ball 23.75 4 l 218 4.5 71% 4 Hal 23.50 2 3 l 205 4 52% 5 Bal 23.25 6 1 219 4.5 52% 6 Bal 23 5 2 1 215 4 36% 7 Bal 22.5 6 4 202 4.5 37% 50 What is claimed is:
The following are the ranges of elements of the silver based alloy of the present invention:
1. An alloy consisting essentially of about 15-30% Pd, about 02-10% of an element of the group consisting of Cr, Fe, and In and mixtures thereof and the balance Ag.
2. The alloy of claim 1 wherein the content of the element of the group is about 05-10% and the balance Ag.
3. The alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 23.5% Pd, about .1% Fe and the balance Ag.
4. The alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 25% Pd, about 3.5% In and the balance Ag.
5. The alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 24.25% Pd, about 0.75% Fe, about 0.9% Sn, about 6% Zn and the balance Ag.
6. The alloy of claim 1 further including from about 02-10% of an element of the group consisting of Sn and Zn and mixtures thereof.

Claims (6)

1. AN ALLOY CONSISTING ESSENTIALLY OF ABOUT 15-30% PD, ABOUT 0.2-10% OF AN ELEMENT OF THE GROUP CONSISTING OF CR, FE, AND IN AND MIXTURES THEREOF AND THE BALANCE AG.
2. The alloy of claim 1 wherein the content of the element of the group is about 0.5-10% and the balance Ag.
3. The alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 23.5% Pd, about 1% Fe and the balance Ag.
4. The alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 25% Pd, about 3.5% In and the balance Ag.
5. The alloy of claim 1 consisting essentially of about 24.25% Pd, about 0.75% Fe, about 0.9% Sn, about 6% Zn and the balance Ag.
6. The alloy of claim 1 further including from about 0.2-10% of an element of the group consisting of Sn and Zn and mixtures thereof.
US494565A 1974-08-05 1974-08-05 Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy having superior improved ductility and work hardening characteristics Expired - Lifetime US3929475A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US494565A US3929475A (en) 1974-08-05 1974-08-05 Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy having superior improved ductility and work hardening characteristics

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US494565A US3929475A (en) 1974-08-05 1974-08-05 Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy having superior improved ductility and work hardening characteristics

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3929475A true US3929475A (en) 1975-12-30

Family

ID=23964992

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US494565A Expired - Lifetime US3929475A (en) 1974-08-05 1974-08-05 Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy having superior improved ductility and work hardening characteristics

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3929475A (en)

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4149883A (en) * 1976-08-20 1979-04-17 W. C. Heraeus Gmbh Electrical contact
US4261744A (en) * 1979-10-10 1981-04-14 Boyajian Ben K Palladium-based dental alloy containing indium and tin
US4350526A (en) * 1980-08-04 1982-09-21 The J. M. Ney Company Palladium/silver alloy for use with dental procelains
US4389370A (en) * 1981-05-06 1983-06-21 Skalabrin Nicholas J Low gold content dental alloy
US4411863A (en) * 1981-06-23 1983-10-25 Masasuke Otsuka Low-carat corrosion-resistant gold alloy with the skin of the alloy not being blacked upon casting
US4482323A (en) * 1980-08-04 1984-11-13 The J. M. Ney Company Dental restorations using novel palladium silver alloy casting
US4804517A (en) * 1986-03-06 1989-02-14 Williams Dental Company, Inc. Gold colored palladium - indium alloys
US5290371A (en) * 1992-10-28 1994-03-01 The J. M. Ney Company Dental alloy and restoration made therewith
US5431875A (en) * 1994-05-02 1995-07-11 The J. M. Ney Company Dental alloy producing light oxides
US6290501B1 (en) * 1997-04-04 2001-09-18 Degussa-Huls Aktiengesellschaft Silver-palladium alloys for producing a dental prosthesis which can be covered with dental ceramic
US20050189046A1 (en) * 2004-01-22 2005-09-01 Silver Silk Llc. Knitted silver alloy fashion accessory and method of manufacture
US20190003015A1 (en) * 2015-07-31 2019-01-03 Legor Group S.P.A. Age-hardenable sterling silver alloy with improved "tarnishing" resistance and master alloy composition for its production
US11833604B2 (en) 2019-05-23 2023-12-05 Corning Incorporated Method of preparing an electrode for use in forming a honeycomb extrusion die

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1229037A (en) * 1915-08-14 1917-06-05 Electro Metals Products Company Metal alloy.
US1999866A (en) * 1934-07-10 1935-04-30 Baker & Company, Inc. Allot
US2070271A (en) * 1935-01-31 1937-02-09 Mallory & Co Inc P R Electrical contact
US2222544A (en) * 1938-10-19 1940-11-19 Chemical Marketing Company Inc Formed piece of silver palladium alloys
US2773561A (en) * 1955-05-02 1956-12-11 Atlantic Refining Co Silver-palladium film for separation and purification of hydrogen
US3155467A (en) * 1961-08-04 1964-11-03 Nippon Junsuiso Kabushiki Kais Palladium alloy permeable wall for the separation and purification of hydrogen
US3411900A (en) * 1966-04-13 1968-11-19 North American Rockwell Brazing alloy composition

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1229037A (en) * 1915-08-14 1917-06-05 Electro Metals Products Company Metal alloy.
US1999866A (en) * 1934-07-10 1935-04-30 Baker & Company, Inc. Allot
US2070271A (en) * 1935-01-31 1937-02-09 Mallory & Co Inc P R Electrical contact
US2222544A (en) * 1938-10-19 1940-11-19 Chemical Marketing Company Inc Formed piece of silver palladium alloys
US2773561A (en) * 1955-05-02 1956-12-11 Atlantic Refining Co Silver-palladium film for separation and purification of hydrogen
US3155467A (en) * 1961-08-04 1964-11-03 Nippon Junsuiso Kabushiki Kais Palladium alloy permeable wall for the separation and purification of hydrogen
US3411900A (en) * 1966-04-13 1968-11-19 North American Rockwell Brazing alloy composition

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4149883A (en) * 1976-08-20 1979-04-17 W. C. Heraeus Gmbh Electrical contact
US4261744A (en) * 1979-10-10 1981-04-14 Boyajian Ben K Palladium-based dental alloy containing indium and tin
US4350526A (en) * 1980-08-04 1982-09-21 The J. M. Ney Company Palladium/silver alloy for use with dental procelains
US4482323A (en) * 1980-08-04 1984-11-13 The J. M. Ney Company Dental restorations using novel palladium silver alloy casting
US4389370A (en) * 1981-05-06 1983-06-21 Skalabrin Nicholas J Low gold content dental alloy
US4411863A (en) * 1981-06-23 1983-10-25 Masasuke Otsuka Low-carat corrosion-resistant gold alloy with the skin of the alloy not being blacked upon casting
US4804517A (en) * 1986-03-06 1989-02-14 Williams Dental Company, Inc. Gold colored palladium - indium alloys
US5290371A (en) * 1992-10-28 1994-03-01 The J. M. Ney Company Dental alloy and restoration made therewith
US5431875A (en) * 1994-05-02 1995-07-11 The J. M. Ney Company Dental alloy producing light oxides
US6290501B1 (en) * 1997-04-04 2001-09-18 Degussa-Huls Aktiengesellschaft Silver-palladium alloys for producing a dental prosthesis which can be covered with dental ceramic
US20050189046A1 (en) * 2004-01-22 2005-09-01 Silver Silk Llc. Knitted silver alloy fashion accessory and method of manufacture
US20190003015A1 (en) * 2015-07-31 2019-01-03 Legor Group S.P.A. Age-hardenable sterling silver alloy with improved "tarnishing" resistance and master alloy composition for its production
US10876189B2 (en) * 2015-07-31 2020-12-29 Legor Group S.P.A. Age-hardenable sterling silver alloy with improved “tarnishing” resistance and master alloy composition for its production
US11833604B2 (en) 2019-05-23 2023-12-05 Corning Incorporated Method of preparing an electrode for use in forming a honeycomb extrusion die

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3929475A (en) Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy having superior improved ductility and work hardening characteristics
US3819366A (en) Dental alloy
US3134671A (en) Noble metals alloy containing gallium
US3929474A (en) Tarnish resistant silver based dental casting alloy capable of bonding to porcelain
US4201577A (en) Ceramic substrate alloy
CA1331294C (en) Gold colored palladium-indium alloys
US3667936A (en) Dental alloy
US3811876A (en) Silver alloys having high sulphuration resistance
JPH09184033A (en) White gold alloy
Givan Precious metals in dentistry
US4007040A (en) Hard copper free dental gold alloys
US2309136A (en) Process for preparing an alloy for cast dentures
US3841868A (en) Nickel alloys
US3574611A (en) High temperature dental gold alloy
US3574610A (en) Dental gold alloy
US4608229A (en) Palladium metal base dental alloy
US3749570A (en) Alloy for dental use
JPS622031B2 (en)
US3975192A (en) Dental alloy and amalgam
US3985558A (en) Dental alloy and amalgam
US3907555A (en) Nickel alloys
JPS58204141A (en) Low karat gold alloy for casting assuming gold color
AU671376B2 (en) Use of gold-palladium alloys for dental castings
JPS58107436A (en) Alloy for baking dental ceramics
JPS58107438A (en) Low-carat baking alloy for dental use