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Rust on Surgical Forceps | Thread profile

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Title: Rust on Surgical Forceps
Site: Physics Help and Math Help - Physics Forums  Physics Help and Math Help - Physics Forums - site profile
Forum: Chemistry  Chemistry - forum profile
Total authors: 3 authors
Total thread posts: 17 posts
Thread activity: no new posts during last week
Domain info for: physicsforums.com

Thread posts in Rust on Surgical Forceps:

1. 
Started 3 months, 2 weeks ago (2008-06-30 07:53:00)  by ranjanmukhari
DisplayAds("Right1"); Hi, Does anyone work in the medical device industry seen rust forming on Stainless Steel Forceps? The rust I am seeing is at the V-joint of the forceps and I guess the soldering/welding metal is oxidizing- Anyone has experience what kind of soldering/welding materials are used for surgical stainless steel forceps? Thanks!!
Size: 630 bytes
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2. 
Started 2 months, 4 weeks ago (2008-07-16 07:53:00)  by ranjanmukhari
Rust on Surgical Forceps DisplayAds("Right1"); Hi, Does anyone work in the medical device industry seen rust forming on Stainless Steel Forceps? The rust I am seeing is at the V-joint of the forceps and I guess the soldering/welding metal is oxidizing- Anyone has experience what kind of soldering/welding materials...
Size: 970 bytes
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3. 
Started 1 month, 3 weeks ago (2008-08-20 07:53:00)  by ranjanmukhari
DisplayAds("Right1"); Hi, Does anyone work in the medical device industry seen rust forming on Stainless Steel Forceps? The rust I am seeing is at the V-joint of the forceps and I guess the soldering/welding metal is oxidizing- Anyone has experience what kind of soldering/welding materials are used for surgical stainless steel forceps? Thanks!!
Size: 616 bytes
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4. 
Started 4 months ago (2008-06-11 07:53:00)  by ranjanmukhari
DisplayAds("Right1"); Hi, Does anyone work in the medical device industry seen rust forming on Stainless Steel Forceps? The rust I am seeing is at the V-joint of the forceps and I guess the soldering/welding metal is oxidizing- Anyone has experience what kind of soldering/welding materials are used for surgical stainless steel forceps? Thanks!!
Size: 617 bytes
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5. 
Started 4 months ago (2008-06-11 11:00:00)  by Barfolumu
I don't know about the specific steel used in medical forceps, but with regards to stainless steel in general: The main metal added to stainless steel to make it... stainless?... is Chromium. Chromium reacts with oxygen to form a thin layer on the outside of the object, whose atoms are compact enough to "ward off" oxygen in the air. If the protective layer of Chromium Oxide is removed (...
Size: 604 bytes
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6. 
Started 4 months ago (2008-06-11 12:05:00)  by mgb_phys
Originally Posted by Barfolumu If the protective layer of Chromium Oxide is removed (which will likely happen over time at the joint of the forceps), then the steel(Iron) will oxidize because it has been exposed to oxygen in the air....
Size: 1,261 bytes
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7. 
Started 4 months ago (2008-06-11 12:31:00)  by ranjanmukhari
Barfolumu and mgb_phys, Thanks for your response. This is not a scissor type clamp, it is a classic two arm (tongs like) design. Two arms are welded at the end. My guess was that the metal used to hold the two arms is oxidizing as these are new forceps (Never used) which eliminates the possibility of chrome layer degradation with use. Thanks again!!
Size: 428 bytes
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8. 
Started 4 months ago (2008-06-11 12:35:00)  by mgb_phys
Welding stainless is tricky - it can be done well with almost all types, but you have to know what you are doing. The concern would be if it allows small holes for bacteria to survive an autoclave, you could possibly sterilise it with a nitric acid path or a bunsen burner flame.
Size: 327 bytes
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9. 
Started 3 months, 3 weeks ago (2008-06-17 07:53:00)  by ranjanmukhari
DisplayAds("Right1"); Hi, Does anyone work in the medical device industry seen rust forming on Stainless Steel Forceps? The rust I am seeing is at the V-joint of the forceps and I guess the soldering/welding metal is oxidizing- Anyone has experience what kind of soldering/welding materials are used for surgical stainless steel forceps? Thanks!!
Size: 618 bytes
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10. 
Started 2 months, 4 weeks ago (2008-07-16 11:00:00)  by Barfolumu
I don't know about the specific steel used in medical forceps, but with regards to stainless steel in general: The main metal added to stainless steel to make it... stainless?... is Chromium. Chromium reacts with oxygen to form a thin layer on the outside of the object, whose atoms are compact enough to "ward off" oxygen in the air. If the protective layer of Chromium Oxide...
Size: 735 bytes
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Top contributing authors for Rust on Surgical Forceps

Name Posts
ranjanmukhari 8
mgb_phys 6
Barfolumu 3