کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
1421326 | 986405 | 2012 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

ObjectivesTo characterize the effect of crevice corrosion on the strength of dental silver amalgam as determined by the Hertzian ‘ball on disc’ method, with a view to providing a test method for use in standards compliance testing.Materials & methodsSixteen dental silver amalgam products were tested using the ‘ball on disc’ protocol at 30 d after setting at 37 °C in air or immersed in artificial saliva at pH 6.2. The mixed materials were packed into a tapered steel disc mold (10 mm diameter, 3 mm thick) resting on a glass surface, slightly overfilled and carved level with a sharp edge, then ejected at ∼10 min and placed immediately into an incubator at 37 °C. For corrosion specimens, the disc was laid on a flat polystyrene surface, immersed in artificial saliva, to create a spontaneous crevice corrosion cell. Testing was in Hertzian mode, using a 20 mm steel ball, with the specimen resting on a disc of glass-filled polyamide (E = 10 GPa) at a cross-head speed of 0.2 mm/min on a universal testing machine (E3000, Instron). The load at first crack was recorded, as was the number of radial cracks produced.ResultsRadial cracking into 2–4 pieces, in a clinically relevant (non-explosive) mode was observed in all cases. On average, corrosion caused a decrease in load at failure of ∼10%, although the interaction with alloy (analysis of variance) was significant (P ∼ 0.03) indicating variation between products. Comparison of the 30 d dry (uncorroded) results with those at 24 h obtained earlier showed that there was highly significant increase on average (P ∼ 5 × 10−12), but again a significant variation between products (P ∼ 5 × 10−6), the maximum effect being +22%.SignificanceThe ball-on-disc test provides a facile means of ascertaining the sensitivity of dental silver amalgam to corrosion under clinically relevant conditions, and is viable as a standards compliance test.
Journal: Dental Materials - Volume 28, Issue 9, September 2012, Pages e160–e167