The use of titanium as a biomaterial for the treatment of dental implants has been successful and has become the most viable and common option. However, in the last three decades, new alternatives have emerged, such as polymers that could replace metallic materials. The aim of this research work is to demonstrate the structural effects caused by the fatigue phenomenon and the comparison with polymeric materials that may be biomechanically viable by reducing the stress shielding effect at the bone-implant interface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDental implants have become an alternative to replace the teeth of people suffering from edentulous and meet the physiological and morphological characteristics (recovering 95% of the chewing function). The evolution and innovation of biomaterials for dental implants have had a trajectory that dates back to prehistory, where dental pieces were replaced by ivory or seashells, to the present day, where they are replaced by metallic materials such as titanium or ceramics such as zirconium or fiberglass. The numerical evaluation focuses on comparing the stress distribution and general displacement between different dental implants and a healthy tooth when applying a force of 850 N.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFerromagnetic-like behavior at room temperature (300 K) was observed in Pt particles embedded in ion-implanted silica matrices. Results in samples integrated by ultra-small photoluminescent Pt clusters (<2 nm) were compared with samples containing exclusively larger plasmonic Pt nanoparticles (>3 nm). The ferromagnetic behavior coexists simultaneously with a diamagnetic response.
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