| Literature DB >> 35003554 |
Laura Viviana Calvache Arcila1, Nathália de Carvalho Ramos1,2, Tiago Moreira Bastos Campos3, Kiara Serafini Dapieve4, Luiz Felipe Valandro4, Renata Marques de Melo1, Marco Antonio Bottino1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To characterize the microstructure of three yttria partially stabilized zirconia ceramics and to compare their hardness, indentation fracture resistance (IFR), biaxial flexural strength (BFS), and fatigue flexural strength.Entities:
Keywords: Dental ceramics; Material thickness; Mechanical stress; Step-stress accelerated fatigue test; Y-TZP ceramic
Year: 2021 PMID: 35003554 PMCID: PMC8712112 DOI: 10.4047/jap.2021.13.6.385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adv Prosthodont ISSN: 2005-7806 Impact factor: 1.904
Fig. 1Topography micrographs of 3Y-TZP (left), 4Y-PSZ (center) and 5Y-PSZ (right column) ceramics under 2000× magnification in the first row, 10000× in the second row, and the fracture surfaces in the third row. It possible to observe the grain morphology and the presence of pores, mainly in 4Y- and 5Y-PSZ ceramics (yellow arrows indicate pores/surface defects). Regarding the fracture patterns, all images were observed in secondary electrons, the specimen was submitted to tensile stress at the bottom and compression stress at the top – arrows indicate the fracture origin, and H indicates hackles.
Quantification of the chemical elements by mass (%) present in the zirconia ceramics according to EDX analysis
Zr= Zirconium and Y= Yttrium
Fig. 2XRD graphs depicting the peaks related to each specific crystallographic phase, enabling to infer the material’s crystallographic microstructure. The letter “t” indicates the peaks of the tetragonal phase and letter “c” the peaks of the cubic phase. The squares show the quantification of the tetragonal and cubic phases according to Rietveld’s analysis.
Mean values and standard deviation of quasi-static biaxial flexural strength, strength degradation percentage, Vickers hardness, and indentation fracture resistance
*Two-way ANOVA and Tukey’s post-hoc test (95%) for flexural strength data analysis, and One-way ANOVA and Tukey’s test for hardness and indentation fracture resistance analysis (95%).
**Different letters represent the statistical differences in the columns.
Results of fatigue biaxial flexural strength in MPa, the number of cycles until failure and respective confidence intervals (CI)
*Different letters indicate statistical differences in each column according to Kaplan-Meier and Mantel-Cox tests (α = 0.05).
Survival rates considering data of fatigue strength and number of cycles until failure (probability of exceeding strength and number of cycles without fail and their respective standard deviations)