4.6 Article

The determination of phosphorus containing compounds in dental casting investment products by P-31 solid-state MAS-NMR spectroscopy

Journal

DENTAL MATERIALS
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 415-424

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dental.2006.02.010

Keywords

dentistry; dental casting investment material; dental refractory die material; phosphate-bonded investment; setting; burn-out; solid-state NMR spectroscopy; P-31 NMR spectroscopy

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Objectives. To use P-31 solid-state MAS-NMR to determine the phosphorus compounds that occur in dental casting investment material: (a) as-received, (b) after setting and (c) after burn-out and discover whether such compounds are the same in each material across a product range. Methods. {H-1} High powered decoupling (HPDC) and {H-1} cross-polarization (CP) P-31 solid-state MAS-NMR spectroscopy at a resonance frequency of 121.4 MHz were used. Six commercial products were examined. Manufacturer's instructions were followed and a special liquid was used without dilution. Results. All products contain ammonium dihydrogen phosphate as the acid phosphate required for the setting reaction. All set by the formation of struvite and significant amounts of amorphous magnesium orthophosphate. In three products, lesser amounts of newberyite were present and in another the equivalent amorphous compound was formed. When burnt-out, magnesium metaphosphate or pyrophosphate was the dominant matrix compound. A higher burn-out temperature favoured pyrophosphate formation. Farringtonite was present to a lesser extent with the metaphosphate. Significance. Compounds that were not detected in earlier X-ray powder diffraction spectroscopy studies were detected by NMR, notably amorphous and glassy compounds (magnesium orthophosphate in set investment and magnesium metaphosphate in burnt-out material). The variation between products was significant and far greater than expected from the published scientific literature. Since the formation of compounds is affected by technical procedure and ambient conditions, these findings could offer some insight into the cause of the unpredictability of expansion measurements between laboratories. Further research is being undertaken.(C) 2006 Academy of Dental Materials. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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