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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effect of amount of grinding on flexural strength of dental ceramics.

TLDR
The flexural strength values of Crys-Cera and Empress decreased with increasing amounts of grinding, while that of OCC increased with increased grinding, and the surfaces of all specimens were smoother when the amount of grinding was deeper.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine a suitable amount of grinding of a flexural test specimen for clinical evaluation of dental ceramics. Three dental ceramics (Crys-Cera, OCC and IPS Empress Cosmo) were selected. Five types of bar-shaped patterns were prepared for a three-point bending test, and four types of disk-shaped patterns for a biaxial flexural test. Ceramic specimens were fabricated using these patterns in accordance with the manufacturers' instructions. All specimens were ground with diamond polishing pads to yield either bar or disk specimens with the same final geometry. The surface roughness and X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns of the specimens were examined. The flexural strength values of Crys-Cera and Empress decreased with increasing amounts of grinding, while that of OCC increased with increased grinding. The surfaces of all specimens were smoother when the amount of grinding was deeper. The XRD patterns of Crys-Cera and Empress changed with increased grinding; however, that of OCC did not change regardless of the extent of grinding. The flexural strengths of three dental ceramics differed with the amount of grinding probably because of changes of surface roughness and crystalline component composition. Unground specimens provided important insight into clinical failure modes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The biaxial flexural strength and fatigue property of Lava Y-TZP dental ceramic.

TL;DR: There was no difference in flexural strength of uncolored and colored Y-TZP ceramic and the fatigue limit of un colored, FS4 and FS7 zirconia may be defined as lying between 60 and 65% of the stress to failure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of sandblasting, grinding, polishing and glazing on the flexural strength of two pressable all-ceramic dental materials

TL;DR: Surface roughness may not be the only feature that determines strength of pressable materials, and other issues such as porosity, microstructural residual stresses, surface and bulk defects may also be pertinent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microstructure study on selective laser melting yttria stabilized zirconia ceramic with near IR fiber laser

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore selective laser melting of yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) ceramic by a 1 μm wavelength fiber laser; investigate the influence of different laser powers and different scanning velocities on the microstructure, the relative density, the deformation of ceramic sample and the micro-hardness; and analyze the crystal structure transformation during the fabrication.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of the effects of handpiece speed, abrasive characteristics, and polishing load on the flexural strength of polished ceramics.

TL;DR: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of controlled polishing on the flexural strength of dental ceramics by using a custom-made machine that applied standardized loads and speeds that coincided with the mean Loads and speeds used by experienced prosthodontists.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of surface roughness on the Weibull distribution of porcelain strength

TL;DR: The Weibull modulus of the glazed group was the largest (16.3), and the surface roughness was found to influence the WeibULL modulus.
References
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Book

Phillips' Science of Dental Materials

TL;DR: The science of dental materials is studied in detail in the context of toothpastes, using X-ray diffraction analysis for the determination of particle numbers.
Book

Contemporary Fixed Prosthodontics

TL;DR: Contemporary Fixed Prosthodontics, Contemporary Fixedprosthodonics , کتابخانه دیجیتال جندی شاپور اهواز
Journal ArticleDOI

Ceramics in restorative and prosthetic dentistry 1

TL;DR: Significant improvements seem possible in the clinical use of ceramics based on engineering solutions derived from the study of clinically failed restorations, on the incorporation of higher levels of “biomimicry” in new systems, and on the synergistic developments in dental cements and adhesive dentin bonding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fracture Surface Characterization of Clinically Failed All-ceramic Crowns

TL;DR: It is concluded that the fracture initiation sites of dental ceramics are controlled primarily by the location and size of the critical flaw, and not by specimen thickness.
Journal Article

Fracture surface analysis of dental ceramics: clinically failed restorations.

TL;DR: Fractography was used to study all-ceramic restorations that had failed clinically and identified a majority of the crowns apparently failed from the internal surface, indicating this as the highest tensile surface and/or the location of the largest flaws.
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