Non-toxic Material
Durable Coating over 4 weeks
Not Discolored by Food
No peeling, No fragmentizing
Anti-bacterial
No Peeling of the Coating : Just Wear-out
Non Toxic : Silver and Parylene (FDA Class 4)
Half Anterior Coated Archwire : Improved Friction
Silver Crystal
Reasons of Underdeveloped Market
Ag+ : Bioactivity Kills Bacteria
Ag-SD & Silver Nanomaterials : Treating external infection
Medical Uses : Urinary Catheters Endotracheal breathing tube
Silver
Silver has long been valued as a precious metal, and it is used as an investment, to make ornaments, jewelry, high-value tableware, utensils (hence the term silverware), and currency coins. Today, silver metal is also used in electrical contacts and conductors, in mirrors and in catalysis of chemical reactions. Its compounds are used in photographic film, and dilute silver nitrate solutions and other silver compounds are used as disinfectants and microbiocides. While many medical antimicrobial uses of silver have been supplanted by antibiotics, further research into clinical potential continues.
Characteristics
Silver is a very ductile, malleable (slightly harder than gold), monovalent coinage metal, with a brilliant white metallic luster that can take a high degree of polish. It has the highest electrical conductivity of all metals, even higher than copper, but its greater cost has prevented it from being widely used in place of copper for electrical purposes. (Despite this, 13,540 tons were used in the electromagnets used for enriching uranium during World War II, mainly because of the wartime shortage of copper.) An exception to this is in radio-frequency engineering, particularly at VHF and higher frequencies, where silver plating to improve electrical conductivity of parts, including wires, is widely employed.
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