Basic Definitions and Concepts
| # | Question | Answer |
| 1 | Define friction in orthodontics | Force opposing relative motion between two systems (bracket, archwire, ligation) that are in contact |
| 2 | Why is friction inevitable in orthodontics? | Because the bracket, archwire, and ligation are always in physical contact during sliding mechanics |
| 3 | Name the two types of friction | Static friction and kinetic friction |
| 4 | Define static friction | Friction that opposes an applied force; its magnitude equals whatever is needed to prevent motion until overcome. |
| 5 | Define kinetic friction | Friction that opposes the direction of motion once movement has started; usually less than static friction. |
| 6 | Which type of friction is clinically more relevant in orthodontics, and why? | Static friction, because continuous sliding motion along the archwire rarely occurs clinically. |
| 7 | Why is kinetic friction considered practically irrelevant in tooth movement? | Because orthodontic tooth movement is not continuous sliding but an intermittent, quasi-static process. |
| 8 | What is meant by “quasi-static thermodynamic process” in sliding mechanics? | A slow process that passes through a sequence of states close to equilibrium, rather than true continuous motion. |
| 9 | Who authored the classic critical review on friction and resistance to sliding? | S. Jack Burrow, published in AJO-DO 2009. |
| 10 | What does resistance to sliding (RS) mean? | The total resistance encountered by a wire sliding through a bracket comprises friction, binding, and notching. |
Biomechanics of Conventional Sliding
| # | Question | Answer |
| 11 | In sliding mechanics, where are forces applied relative to the center of resistance (Cres)? | Away from the center of resistance of the segments being moved |
| 12 | What is the consequence of applying force away from Cres? | It generates moments that tip the segments in different planes |
| 13 | Describe the sagittal-plane effect of retraction force in extraction cases | Anterior segment tips distally, posterior segment tips mesially |
| 14 | Describe the transverse-plane effect | Mesial out-rotation of canines and mesial in-rotation of premolars |
| 15 | Describe the vertical-plane effect | Deepening of the bite |
| 16 | How does frictionless mechanics counter these unwanted moments? | Alpha and beta moments incorporated into loops compensate for the moments generated by the applied force |
| 17 | How does sliding mechanics generate the necessary counteracting moments? | Through the interaction between bracket and wire (contact and binding), not through loop bends |
| 18 | What is expressed as a result of bracket-wire interaction in sliding mechanics? | First, second, and third order movements (tip, torque, in-out) |
| 19 | Why is understanding sliding biomechanics a prerequisite to understanding friction’s role? | Because friction’s clinical significance depends on how forces and moments are generated during sliding |
| 20 | What produces the tipping, torqueing, and in-out corrections in sliding mechanics if not loop bends? | Interactive contact/binding between archwire, bracket, and ligation |
Is Friction All Bad? Stick-Slip Phenomenon
| # | Question | Answer |
| 21 | Is friction entirely undesirable in orthodontics? | No; friction is both a hindrance during sliding and a necessity for generating corrective couples |
| 22 | What is desired during retraction with sliding mechanics? | Reduced friction so the wire can freely slide through the bracket |
| 23 | What stops further tipping of a tooth during retraction? | Contact of the bracket with the wire, which prevents further tipping |
| 24 | What creates the moment of the couple during retraction? | Classic frictional contact between bracket and wire plus the wire’s resilience |
| 25 | What moment is induced in the anterior segment during retraction? | Distal root uprighting moment |
| 26 | What moment is induced in the posterior segment during retraction? | Mesial (root) uprighting moment |
| 27 | What happens after the uprighting movement occurs? | The frictional contact between bracket and wire is relieved |
| 28 | What happens to the tooth once contact is relieved? | It is free to tip again for the next cycle |
| 29 | What is this repeating cycle called? | Stick-slip phenomenon, also called “walking of the canine” |
| 30 | Is stick-slip specific to canine retraction only? | No; a similar contact-based couple is created for torqueing and in-out movements as well |
| 31 | Summarize the ideal friction requirement in sliding mechanics | Low friction is needed for sliding, but adequate frictional contact is needed to deliver couples |
| 32 | What are the two opposing frictional requirements in sliding mechanics called (concept)? | The friction paradox — lower friction desired for translation, higher friction/binding desired for couple generation |
Force Decay Concept
| # | Question | Answer |
| 33 | Why is force decay necessary in regular sliding mechanics? | For the couple from bracket-wire interaction to be adequately expressed for tip, torque, and in-out correction |
| 34 | What happens if the applied force does not decay or is too high? | The couple generated will be inadequate for tipping, torqueing, and in-out movements to occur |
| 35 | Which reference discusses force decay in incisor retraction with mini-implant anchorage? | Upadhyay, Yadav, and Nanda, Journal of Orthodontics 2014 |
| 36 | How does high sustained force affect binding-generated couples? | It prevents adequate binding-based couple generation needed for correction movements |
Sliding Mechanics with Implants
| # | Question | Answer |
| 37 | Name three clinical scenarios where sliding mechanics is typically used | Generalized spacing cases, premolar extraction cases, enmasse distalization with implants |
| 38 | Does implant-assisted space closure fall under friction or frictionless mechanics? | Friction mechanics, since it involves the archwire sliding through brackets |
| 39 | What is the major biomechanical difference between conventional and implant-assisted sliding? | Difference in space utilization and line of force |
| 40 | How much anchorage loss occurs with implant-assisted sliding? | Almost none — anchorage conservation is nearly full |
| 41 | Which types of space closure can be achieved with implant-supported sliding? | Group A or Group C space closure |
| 42 | Why is the line of force diagonal in implant-assisted sliding? | Because implants are usually placed higher than the molar hooks |
| 43 | How does implant placement affect the line of force relative to Cres? | It brings the line of force closer to the center of resistance |
| 44 | What effect does this closer line of force have on the moments generated? | Moments are of lesser magnitude compared with conventional mechanics |
| 45 | What effect does lower moment magnitude have on the required couple? | The moment of the couple required also becomes lesser |
| 46 | Can the line of force be modified in implant mechanics? | Yes, infinitely, based on implant and hook position relative to the case requirement |
V-Bend Sliding Mechanics (Mulligan Mechanics)
| # | Question | Answer |
| 47 | Who developed V-bend sliding mechanics and when? | Thomas F. Mulligan, in the 1970s |
| 48 | What is the primary clinical application of V-bend mechanics? | Closing space by moving individual teeth (canine retraction or molar protraction) |
| 49 | What key concept did Mulligan introduce? | Differential moment as a means of effective intraoral anchorage |
| 50 | How is differential moment achieved? | By applying unequal alpha and beta moments |
| 51 | How are moments and forces applied separately in V-bend mechanics? | Moments via the continuous archwire and its bends; force via auxiliaries like elastomeric chain or closed-coil springs |
| 52 | Why is an off-center V-bend used? | To create unequal moments, with a higher moment applied to the anchorage teeth |
| 53 | How does bend position affect wire segment length and moment? | Bend closer to a bracket shortens that wire segment; shorter wires have higher bending moments than longer wires |
| 54 | Which bracket experiences the higher moment: closer or farther from the V-bend? | The bracket closer to the V-bend |
| 55 | How does a higher moment affect tipping of that segment? | The segment with higher moment undergoes less tipping for the same reciprocal force, establishing differential anchorage |
| 56 | What V-bend angle is used for 0.016″ round stainless steel wire? | 45° |
| 57 | What V-bend angle is used for 0.018″ wire? | 30° |
| 58 | What V-bend angle is used for 0.020″ wire? | 15° |
| 59 | What is the relationship between wire size and V-bend angle? | Inverse relationship — thinner wire needs a larger V-bend angle |
| 60 | Who published the force system analysis of V-bend sliding mechanics? | Siatkowski RE, JCO 1994 |
Laws of Friction
| # | Question | Answer |
| 61 | State the first law of friction | Frictional force is proportional to the normal applied load by a constant, the coefficient of friction |
| 62 | State the second law of friction | The coefficient of friction is independent of apparent contact area |
| 63 | State the third law of friction | The coefficient of friction of a couple is independent of the sliding velocity |
| 64 | According to the second law, should bracket/wire dimensions matter clinically? | Theoretically no, but clinically dimensions matter with respect to the critical contact angle |
| 65 | Why does dimension still matter despite the second law? | Because dimensions determine the critical contact angle, beyond which binding/notching (not classical friction) dominates |
Resistance to Sliding – Kusy and Whitley Model
| # | Question | Answer |
| 66 | Who proposed dividing resistance to sliding into three components? | Kusy and Whitley . |
| 67 | Name the three components of resistance to sliding | Friction (FR), binding (BI), notching (NO) . |
| 68 | Define friction (FR) component | Static or kinetic friction due to wire contact with flat bracket surfaces . |
| 69 | Define binding (BI) component | Contact between wire and the corners of the bracket, occurring when the tooth tips or wire flexes . |
| 70 | When does binding occur clinically? | When a force applied to move a tooth causes it to tip until the wire contacts the bracket corners . |
| 71 | Define notching (NO) component | Permanent deformation of the wire at the wire-bracket corner interface . |
| 72 | Is notching reversible? | No, it represents permanent wire deformation . |
| 73 | What is the sequence of resistance components as contact angle increases? | Friction → Binding → Notching |
Critical Contact Angle
| # | Question | Answer |
| 74 | Define the contact angle (θ) | The angle between the archwire and the bracket slot |
| 75 | Define the critical contact angle (θc) | The angle boundary between classical frictional behavior and binding/notching phenomena . |
| 76 | What happens when θ ≤ θc? | Classical friction occurs |
| 77 | What happens when θ > θc? | Binding and notching begin, increasingly restricting sliding mechanics . |
| 78 | What is the theoretical maximum θc for nominal bracket/wire dimensions? | Approximately 3.7 degrees for standard slot sizes . |
| 79 | What range does θc typically fall within? | Between 0 and approximately 4 degrees . |
| 80 | Who established the mathematical derivation for θc? | Kusy and Whitley (EJO 1999) . |
| 81 | Why is knowledge of both wire AND bracket dimensions necessary to calculate θc? | Knowledge of the archwire-bracket combination is needed, not either component alone . |
| 82 | What clinical strategy minimizes binding and notching? | Selecting archwire and slot size combinations that keep the contact angle low |
| 83 | Should sliding mechanics ideally begin when θ is much less than θc, equal to θc, or greater? | Sliding should be initiated when θ approximates θc, avoiding over-alignment before sliding and avoiding exceeding θc . |
Coefficient of Friction and Force Equations
Applied/Clinical and Integrative Questions
| # | Question | Answer |
| 95 | Why would an orthodontist prefer stainless steel wires for sliding mechanics? | Lowest surface roughness and coefficient of friction, giving more efficient force delivery |
| 96 | Why might beta-titanium be avoided during heavy sliding mechanics despite good elasticity? | Higher friction and greater variability in frictional forces reduce efficiency of force delivery |
| 97 | How does implant-assisted sliding reduce the friction-related side effects of conventional sliding? | By reducing moment magnitude near Cres, it reduces the binding-generated moments and associated tipping |
| 98 | Compare frictionless and friction (sliding) mechanics in generating couples | Frictionless mechanics use built-in loop moments (alpha/beta); sliding mechanics rely on bracket-wire binding/friction contact |
| 99 | What is a clinical implication of understanding the critical contact angle? | It can help avoid unnecessary over-alignment before sliding and prevent excessive binding, potentially reducing treatment time . |
| 100 | Summarize the key biomechanical principle for effective sliding mechanics | Balance low sliding friction (for translation) with adequate binding contact (for necessary couple generation) while selecting materials/dimensions to control the coefficient of friction and critical contact angle |







