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Quantifying the Strength of a Resin-coated Dental Ceramic
1 Biomaterials Unit, University of Birmingham School of Dentistry, St. Chads Queensway, Birmingham B4 6NN, UK; and Correspondence: * corresponding author, addisono{at}adf.bham.ac.uk Resin luting all-ceramic restorations increases clinical performance; however, the strengthening mechanisms are not fully understood. The authors have previously proposed the existence of a resin-ceramic hybrid layer, and the hypothesis tested was that ceramic strength enhancement was conferred by the characteristics of the resin-ceramic hybrid layer. Dentin porcelain discs were polished with a P4000-grade abrasive paper, and half were centrally indented at 9.8 N. Further discs were alumina-air-abraded. Groups of 30 specimens were coated with resin cement thicknesses varying from 0 to 250 ± 20 µm before bi-axial flexure testing. Following investigation of residual stresses by annealing, regression analysis enabled us to calculate the magnitude of actual strengthening for a theoretical zero thickness of resin cement on each surface texture. Accounting for resin bulk strengthening, resin cement coating significantly increased the mean strength that was attributed to a resin-ceramic hybrid layer sensitive to surface texture.
Key Words: feldspathic porcelain bi-axial flexure strength resin cement thickness
Journal of Dental Research, Vol. 87, No. 6,
542-547 (2008) |
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