| Literature DB >> 29503713 |
Canan Akay1, Merve Çakırbay Tanış2, Emre Mumcu1, Mehmet Ali Kılıçarslan3, Murat Şen4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this in vitro study is to examine the effects of a nano-structured alumina coating on the adhesion between resin cements and zirconia ceramics using a four-point bending test.Entities:
Keywords: Four-point bending; Nano-structured alumina coating; Surface modification; Zirconia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29503713 PMCID: PMC5829286 DOI: 10.4047/jap.2018.10.1.43
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adv Prosthodont ISSN: 2005-7806 Impact factor: 1.904
Experimental materials and their characteristics
| Product Batch | Composition | Manufacturer | Lot Number |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zirconia | ZrO3; specifications, Y2O3 % 4–6, Al2O3 % 1, SiO2 % max. 0.02, Fe2O3 % max. 0.01, Na2O % max. 0.04 | Zirkon-Zahn, Bruneck, Italy | ZB3056B |
| Panavia SA Cement Plus | Paste A: MDP/Bis GMA/ TEGDMA/HEMA Hydrophobic aromatic dimethacrylate Silaned barium glass filler, silaned colloidal silica, dl-Camphorquinone, peroxide, catalysts, pigments | Kuraray Noritake Dental Inc., Okayama, Japan | 4L0041 |
| Paste B: Hydrophobic aromatic dimethacrylate, Hydrophobic aliphatic dimethacrylate, silaned barium glass filler, surface treated sodium flouride, accelerators, pigments | |||
| Rely-X U200 | Base: Glass powder, silica, calcium hydroxide, pigment, substituted pyrimidine, peroxy compound, initiator | 3M/ESPE, Neuss, Germany | 596820 |
| Catalyst: Methacrylated, phosphoric esters, dimethacrylates, acetate, stabilizers, self-cure initiators, light-cure initiators |
The four-point bending test is recommended for analyzing dental materials because it can simulate intraoral loading conditions, and thus more realistic data can be obtained.22
Mean values of flexural bond strength test (in MPa)
| Group | N | Min | Max | Mean | SD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Rely-X | 10 | 6.10 | 25.94 | 12.00 E | 6.76 |
| Panavia | 10 | 6.41 | 24.41 | 16.70 D,E | 5.08 | |
| II | Rely-X | 10 | 24.72 | 46.23 | 35.62 A,B,C | 8.60 |
| Panavia | 8 | 24.49 | 41.50 | 33.75 B,C | 5.24 | |
| III | Rely-X | 10 | 13.43 | 69.27 | 47.88 AB | 18.95 |
| Panavia | 10 | 27.77 | 40.74 | 33.09 C | 4.07 | |
| IV | Rely-X | 10 | 19.53 | 42.57 | 30.82 C,D | 7.73 |
| Panavia | 10 | 18.77 | 40.89 | 31.21 C | 7.98 | |
| V | Rely-X | 8 | 33.11 | 66.53 | 50.40 A | 12.51 |
| Panavia | 9 | 28.23 | 52.79 | 39.50 A,B,C | 8.67 | |
*Different superscript letters describe statistical differences in flexural bond strength test (P < .05).
Fig. 1SEM images of zirconia samples after surface treatments.(×10,000, bar 10 µm): (A) airborne-particle abrasion with 110 µm aluminum oxide particles (B) airborne-particle abrasion with 110 µm silica-modified aluminum oxide particles (C) airborne-particle abrasion with 30 µm silica-coated aluminum oxide particles (D) nano-structured alumina coating.
Fig. 2AFM images of zirconia samples after different surface treatments. (A) airborne-particle abrasion with 110 µm aluminum oxide particles (B) airborne-particle abrasion with 110 µm silica-modified aluminum oxide particles (C) airborne-particle abrasion with 30 µm silicacoated aluminum oxide particles (D) nano-structured alumina coating. Differences in zirconia surface texture were evident according to the conditioning treatment performed. A more retentive surface was evident coated with nano-structured alumina.
AFM roughness and surface area analysis of the zirconia ceramics after different surface treatment methods
| APA | TCS | ROC | AIC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ra (nm) | 157 | 216 | 378 | 195 |
| Rq | 196 | 280 | 490 | 246 |