Literature DB >> 29929846

Development of an oxirane/acrylate interpenetrating polymer network (IPN) resin system.

Robert Danso1, Blake Hoedebecke2, Kyumin Whang1, Shayda Sarrami1, Allen Johnston3, Sam Flipse1, Nancy Wong1, H Ralph Rawls4.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Develop a hydrophobic, degradation-resistant dental restorative based on an Oxirane-Acrylate IPN System (OASys) with low shrinkage-stress to substantially extend clinical lifetime.
METHODS: Unfilled OASys blends were prepared using dipenta-erythritol-hexaacrylate (DPHA) and p-cycloaliphatic-diepoxide (EP5000). Varying proportions of camphorquinone/iodonium photoinitiator, with a co-reactant oligomeric-diol, served as the experimental curing system. The effects of oxirane-acrylate ratio on the degree-of-cure (Durometer-D hardness), hydrophobicity (contact angle), mechanical properties (3-point bending), near-infrared FTIR degree-of-conversion (DoC), polymerization shrinkage, and shrinkage stress were determined. 70:30 BisGMA:TEGDMA resin served as control.
RESULTS: Oxirane tended to decrease hardness and increase hydrophobicity. 0:100, 25:75, 50:50 EP5000:DPHA are harder after 24h than control. 75:25 and 100:0 EP5000:DPHA increased in hardness over 24h, but were softer than control. All groups increased in contact angle over 24h. After 24h, 50:50, 75:25 and 0:100 EP5000:DPHA were more hydrophobic (∼75-84°) than the control (∼65°). Acrylate DoC was ∼60% across all experimental groups. Initial oxirane conversion varied from ∼42% in 100:0 EP5000:DPHA to ∼82% 75:25 EP5000:DPHA. However, oxirane DoC increased for 100:0 EP5000:DPHA to ∼73° over 24h, demonstrating dark cure. Moduli and ultimate transverse strengths of OASys groups were higher than for 0:100 EP5000:DPHA, with 50:50 EP5000:DPHA having higher modulus than other experimental groups. However, the control had higher modulus and UTS than all experimental groups. Volumetric shrinkage averaged 7% for experimental groups, but stress decreased dramatically with increasing oxirane content. SIGNIFICANCE: Hydrophobic, low shrinkage-stress OASys resins are promising for development of composites that improve longevity and reduce the cost of dental care.
Copyright © 2018 The Academy of Dental Materials. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Acrylate; Cationic photoinitiation; Degree of conversion; Hydrophobicity; Interpenetrating network; Oxirane; Restorative resin; Shrinkage stress; Volumetric shrinkage

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Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29929846      PMCID: PMC6311097          DOI: 10.1016/j.dental.2018.06.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dent Mater        ISSN: 0109-5641            Impact factor:   5.304


  3 in total

1.  Vinyl sulfonamide based thermosetting composites via thiol-Michael polymerization.

Authors:  Jasmine Sinha; Adam Dobson; Osamah Bankhar; Maciej Podgórski; Parag K Shah; Sheryl L W Zajdowicz; Abdulaziz Alotaibi; Jeffrey W Stansbury; Christopher N Bowman
Journal:  Dent Mater       Date:  2019-11-30       Impact factor: 5.304

Review 2.  Moving Towards a Finer Way of Light-Cured Resin-Based Restorative Dental Materials: Recent Advances in Photoinitiating Systems Based on Iodonium Salts.

Authors:  Monika Topa; Joanna Ortyl
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2020-09-15       Impact factor: 3.623

3.  Novel Multifunctional Epoxy (Meth)Acrylate Resins and Coatings Preparation via Cationic and Free-Radical Photopolymerization.

Authors:  Paulina Bednarczyk; Izabela Irska; Konrad Gziut; Paula Ossowicz-Rupniewska
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-24       Impact factor: 4.329

  3 in total

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