Objectives: The purpose of the current study was to examine the influence of the pre-cementation surface modification techniques, namely alumina abrasion and surface grinding, routinely employed by dental practitioners prior to cementation and placement of crown and bridge restorations on the performance of a Y-TZP dental ceramic.
Methods: Twelve sets of 30 Lava ceramic discs (13 mm diameter, 1.5mm thickness) supplied by the manufacturer were randomly selected. Six groups were abraded utilising 25, 50 and 110 microm alumina and stored dry or in a water bath at 37+/-1 degrees C for 24 h. Four groups were ground utilising a fine or a coarse grit diamond bur, specimens were ground dry or while using water as a coolant. The mean bi-axial flexure strengths, standard deviations and associated Weibull moduli (m) were determined. The surface roughness, hardness and phase composition were assessed utilising profilometry, the Vicker's hardness indentation and X-ray diffraction, respectively.
Results: No significant difference (P > 0.05) was identified in the bi-axial flexure strength of the 25, 50 and 110 microm alumina-abraded and the control specimens stored dry and wet for 24h. However, a significant increase in m was identified for the alumina-abraded specimens stored dry (10.7+/-1.9, 10.6+/-1.9 and 10.6+/-1.9) compared with the control (7.5+/-1.3) and the specimens stored in a water bath. In addition, the alumina abrasion regimes reduced the surface roughness compared with the controls. The coarse grinding regime significantly reduced both the bi-axial flexure strength and the associated m compared with the control whilst no significant difference was identified for the fine grinding regimes. The surface modification techniques initiated a phase transformation mechanism and resulted in the formation of a layer of compressive stresses on the surface of the disc-shaped specimens.
Conclusions: The combination of the reduced surface roughness and the formation of a surface layer of compressive stress as a result of the alumina abrasion regimes investigated increased the reliability of the bi-axial flexure strength. The presence of water in the current study did not detrimentally influence the performance of the Y-TZP ceramic under investigation. Coarse grinding significantly reduced the bi-axial flexure strength and m due to the increased surface roughness. The Y-TZP specimens in the current investigation underwent a toughening mechanism as a result of a phase transformation mechanism which generated a transformation compressive stress that opposes the externally applied, crack-propagating tensile stress.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2005.06.006 | DOI Listing |
J Taibah Univ Med Sci
December 2023
Department of Restorative, Dentistry, Taibah University, Almadinah Almunawwarah, KSA.
Dent Mater
May 2023
Faculty of Dentistry, Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, King's College London, London, UK.
Objective: The study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of a vacuum impregnation process to eliminate the porosity at the ceramic-resin interface to optimize the reinforcement of a glass-ceramic by resin cementation.
Methods: 100 leucite glass-ceramic disks (1.0 ± 0.
Dent Mater
December 2020
School of Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada; Faculty of Dentistry, Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, King's College London, London, UK. Electronic address:
Objectives: The objective was to explore how clinically relevant machining process and heat treatment influence damage accumulation and strength degradation in lithium silicate-based glass ceramics machined in the fully crystallized state.
Methods: A commercial zirconia-reinforced lithium silicate (ZLS) glass ceramic with a fully developed microstructure (Celtra® Duo) was studied. Disk-shaped specimens (nominal 10 mm diameter and 1 mm thickness) were fabricated either using a CAD-CAM process, creating a clinically relevant dental restoration surface, or were sectioned from water-jet cut cylindrical blocks with their critical surfaces consistently polished.
Dent Mater
January 2019
University of Alberta, School of Dentistry, Edmonton, AB, Canada. Electronic address:
Objective: The fabrication of all-ceramic restorations using Computer Aided Design and Computer Aided Manufacturing (CAD-CAM) most commonly involves subtractive machining which results in strength-limiting, surface and sub-surface damage in the resultant prosthesis. The objective was to explore how clinically relevant machining-process variables, and material variables, affect damage accumulation in lithium silicate glass-ceramics.
Methods: Three commercial lithium silicate glass-ceramics (IPS e.
Dent Mater
November 2017
Biomaterials Unit, University of Birmingham, School of Dentistry, 5 Mill Pool Way, Birmingham B5 7EG, UK; University of Alberta, School of Dentistry, Edmonton, AB T6G 1C9, Canada. Electronic address:
Objectives: Despite developments in polycrystalline ceramics, glassy dental-ceramic materials provide the optimum cosmetic option in most clinical situations to mimic the natural dentition. The clinical success of glassy dental-ceramic materials is often attributed to resin-adhesive bonding techniques. In this study we explore whether shrinkage stresses generated on photo-polymerisation of the resin-cement are sufficient to induce ceramic surface defect stabilization, and we quantify the transient nature of the induced stresses.
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