| Literature DB >> 34063032 |
Mara Elena Rusnac1, Doina Prodan2, Stanca Cuc2, Ioan Petean3, Cristina Prejmerean2, Cristina Gasparik4, Diana Dudea4, Marioara Moldovan2.
Abstract
The objective of this study is the characterization of a novel experimental flowable giomer (G) regarding water sorption, water solubility, and the microstructural characteristics, in comparison to three commercial giomers: Beautifil flow Plus X F00 (B-F00), Beautifil flow F02 (B-F02) and Beautifil flow Plus X F03 (B-F03), Shofu, Kyoto, Japan.Entities:
Keywords: AFM; SEM; flow giomers; morphology; solubility; sorption
Year: 2021 PMID: 34063032 PMCID: PMC8124910 DOI: 10.3390/ma14092399
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Commercial Giomer composition (from manufacturers’ instructions—Shofu Dental Corporation, Japan).
| Name | Consistency | Composition | Codification |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beautifil flow Plus X F00 | Minimal flow | 10–20%. Bis-GMA, TEGDMA, Bis-MPEPP, 50–60% S-PRG filler based on fluoroboroaluminosilicate glass, polymerization initiator, pigments and others | B-F00 |
| Beautifil flow F02 | Low flow | 20–30%. Bis-GMA, TEGDMA, 40–50% S-PRG filler based on fluoroboroaluminosilicate glass, polymerization initiator, pigments and others | B-F02 |
| Beautifil flow Plus X F03 | Low flow | 10–20%. Bis-GMA, TEGDMA, Bis-MPEPP, 50–60% S-PRG filler based on fluoroboroaluminosilicate glass, polymerization initiator, pigments and others | B-F03 |
| *Experimental giomer | Flow | 10–40%. *Bis-GMA, TEGDMA, 40–60% filler based on *Exp-glass, *SPRG, *FHAP, polymerization initiator, pigments and others | G |
Bis-GMA (bisphenol A-glycidyl methacrylate), TEDGMA (triethylene glycol dimethacrylate), S-PRG (pre-reacted glass ionomer), Bis-MPEPP (polyethoxy dimethacrylate). *Bis-GMA, *SPRG, *Exp-Glass and *FHAP obtained at the Babeș-Bolyai University, Raluca Ripan Institute for Research in Chemistry, (Cluj-Napoca, Romania). TEGDMA, CQ, DMAEM of the experimental giomer were purchased from Sigma Aldrich Chemical Co.
Figure 1Water sorption of the investigated materials.
Figure 2Water sorption of each individual material over the entire investigation period.
Figure 3Water solubility of the investigated materials.
Figure 4Water solubility of each individual material over the entire investigation period.
Figure 5SEM images (×5000) of the surfaces of the investigated samples: (a,b) B-F00, (c,d) B-F02, (e,f) B-F03 and (g,h) G, before (left) and after (right) the 30 days of depositing in distilled water.
Average roughness measured by AFM and statistical analysis, initial and after 30 days of exposure in distilled water.
| Samples | Ra | Ra | Rq | Rq |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B-F00 | 11.88 ± 2.32 | 73.28 ± 18.27 (<0.05) | 17.34 ± 5.11 | 91.70 ± 22.59 (<0.05) |
| B-F02 | 14.49 ± 8.32 | 139.60 ± 24.69 (<0.05) | 20.77 ± 10.14 | 179.40 ± 31.35 (<0.05) |
| B-F03 | 9.96 ± 6.02 | 105.94 ± 14.74 (<0.05) | 13.854 ± 7.25 | 132.80 ± 16.72 (<0.05) |
| G | 5.16 ± 0.712 | 159.60 ± 34.10 (<0.05) | 6.50 ± 0.84 | 202.40 ± 39.11 (<0.05) |
*Ra (baseline surface roughness) represents the arithmetic average of the absolute values of the roughness profile ordinates; *Rq represents the root mean square average of height deviation taken from the mean image data plane.
Figure 6AFM topographic images of the initial samples: (a) B-F00, (b) B-F02, (c) B-F03, and (d) G; and samples after exposure: (e) B-F00, (f) B-F02, (g) B-F03, and (h) G. Scanned area 5 µm × 5µm. A three-dimensional view of the topography is given below of each image.