4.6 Article

Correlation of shear and dielectric ion viscosity of dental resins - Influence of composition, temperature and filler content

Journal

DENTAL MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 7, Pages 899-907

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dental.2016.03.015

Keywords

Visible light curing resin; Resin based composite; Dielectric Analysis; Ion viscosity; Rheology; Shear viscosity; Filler content

Funding

  1. Federal Republic of Germany, Ministry of Education and Research [17081X10]
  2. Operational Program Research and Development for Innovations by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)
  3. national budget of Czech Republic [CZ.1.05/2.1.00/03.0111]

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Objective. Shear viscosity and ion viscosity of uncured visible light-curing (VLC) resins and resin based composites (RBC) are correlated with respect to the resin composition, temperature and filler content to check where Dielectric Analysis (DEA) investigations of VLC RBC generate similar results as viscosity measurements. Methods. Mixtures of bisphenol A glycidyl methacrylate (Bis-GMA) and triethylene glycol dimethacrylate (TEGDMA) as well as the pure resins were investigated and compared with two commercial VLC dental resins and RBCs (VOCO, Arabesk Top and Grandio). Shear viscosity data was obtained using a Haake Mars III, Thermo Scientific. Ion viscosity measurements performed by a dielectric cure analyzer (DEA 231/1 Epsilon with Mini IDEX-Sensor, Netzsch-Gerfiteb au). Results. Shear viscosity depends reciprocally on the mobility of molecules, whereas the ion viscosity also depends on the ion concentration as it is affected by both ion concentration and mixture viscosity. Except of pure TEGDMA, shear and ion viscosities depend on the resin composition qualitatively in a similar manner. Furthermore, shear and ion viscosities of the commercial VLC dental resins and composites exhibited the same temperature dependency regardless of filler content. Application of typical rheological models (Kitano and Quemada) revealed that ion viscosity measurements can be described with respect to filler contents of up to 30 vol.%. Significance. Rheological behavior of a VLC RBC can be characterized by DEA under the condition that the ion concentration is kept constant. Both methods address the same physical phenomenon- motion of molecules. The proposed relations allows for calculating the viscosity of any Bis-GMA-TEGDMA mixture on the base of the viscosities of the pure components. This study demonstrated the applicability of DEA investigations of VLC RBCs with respect to quality assurance purposes. (C) 2016 The Academy of Dental Materials. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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