Recovery of silver residues from dental amalgam

Authors

  • Heloísa Aparecida Barbosa da Silva Pereira University of São Paulo; Bauru School Of Dentistry; Department of Biological Sciences
  • Flávia Godoy Iano University of São Paulo; Bauru School Of Dentistry; Department of Biological Sciences
  • Thelma Lopes da Silva University of São Paulo; Bauru School Of Dentistry; Department of Biological Sciences
  • Rodrigo Cardoso de Oliveira University of São Paulo; Bauru School Of Dentistry; Department of Biological Sciences
  • Manoel Lima de Menezes State University of São Paulo; School of Sciences; Department of Chemistry
  • Marília Afonso Rabelo Buzalaf University of São Paulo; Bauru School of Dentistry; Department of Biological Sciences

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572010000200005

Keywords:

Dental amalgam, Silver, Solid wastes, Environment

Abstract

Dental amalgam residues are probably the most important chemical residues generated from clinical dental practice because of the presence of heavy metals among its constituents, mainly mercury and silver. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to develop an alternative method for the recovery of silver residues from dental amalgam. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The residue generated after vacuum distillation of dental amalgam for the separation of mercury was initially diluted with 32.5% HNO3, followed by precipitation with 20% NaCl. Sequentially, under constant heating and agitation with NaOH and sucrose, the sample was reduced to metallic silver. However, the processing time was too long, which turned this procedure not viable. In another sequence of experiments, the dilution was accomplished with concentrated HNO3 at 90ºC, followed by precipitation with 20% NaCl. After washing, the pellet was diluted with concentrated NH4OH, water and more NaCl in order to facilitate the reaction with the reducer. RESULTS: Ascorbic acid was efficiently used as reducer, allowing a fast reduction, thus making the procedure viable. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed methodology is of easy application and does not require sophisticated equipment or expensive reagents.

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Published

2010-04-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Recovery of silver residues from dental amalgam . (2010). Journal of Applied Oral Science, 18(2), 121-126. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572010000200005