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Microporosity and polymerization contraction as function of depth in dental resin cements by X‐ray computed microtomography
Author(s) -
Gheller Rafaela,
Burey Adrieli,
Vicentin Bruno Luiz Santana,
Reis Paulo José,
Appoloni Carlos Roberto,
Garbelini Cássia Cilene Dezan,
Hoeppner Márcio Grama
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
microscopy research and technique
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.536
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1097-0029
pISSN - 1059-910X
DOI - 10.1002/jemt.23456
Subject(s) - materials science , polymerization , porosity , composite material , cement , irradiation , x ray microtomography , polymer , optics , physics , nuclear physics
This research aimed to obtain the depth dependence of polymerization contraction and microporosity from irradiated dental resin cements by X‐ray computed microtomography (μCT). Samples ( n = 5) of commercial Relyx U200 (RU) and AllCem Core (AC) dual‐cure resin cements were injected in a cylindrical Teflon sampler (25 mm 3 ) and separated according to polymerization mechanism: self‐cured (not irradiated) and dual‐cured (irradiated from the top surface with a LED device). The cement's volume was scanned with the μCT scanning conditions kept constant. To assess the depth dependence of polymerization contraction, it was measured the displacement of the cement mass from the sample holder at 30 vertical cuts (0.1 mm distant). To probe the microporosity, the percentage of area with presence of porosity by slice was obtained. All data were statistically treated. It was observed a positive linear correlation between depth and polymerization contraction in the irradiated groups. In the other hand, the concentration of micropores decreased with increasing depth. Furthermore, the composition of the resin cement was determinant for the correlation's coefficients of these physical properties with depth. The μCT technique showed to be useful to probe physical properties of dental restorative materials that influence in the clinical outcomes, revealing that, for thin specimens, when light cured the RU cement presented mechanical behavior more favorable for clinical applications.