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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Lee, Hae‐Hyoung; | Kon, Masayuki | Asaoka, Kenzo;
Affiliations: Department of Dental Engineering, School of Dentistry, The University of Tokushima, Tokushima, Kuramoto 3‐18‐15, 770‐8504, Japan
Note: [] Present address: Department of Dental Materials, School of Dentistry, Wonkwong University, Iksan‐shi, Korea.
Note: [] Address correspondence to: Dr Kenzo Asaoka, Department of Dental Engineering, School of Dentistry, The University of Tokushima, 3 Kuramoto‐cho, Tokushima, 770‐8504, Japan. Tel.: +81 88 633 7333; Fax: +81 88 633 9125; E‐mail: asaoka@dent. tokushima‐u.ac.jp.
Abstract: Thermocycling and water storage effects on fracture toughness (K_\mathrm{IC}) of chemically or thermally tempered metal‐ceramic disks were investigated to evaluate the durability of tempering effects with regard to oral aqueous environment. Metal‐ceramic disks (\varnothing10 mm \times 2.0 mm) consisting of opaque porcelain (0.2 mm thick), body porcelain (1.3 mm) and Ni‐Cr‐Be alloy (0.5 mm) were prepared and the porcelain surfaces were polished with 1‐\mum diamond paste. The disks were subjected to ion exchange (potassium or rubidium) or thermal tempering treatments, then with the as‐polished or further annealed disks, thermocycled for 8000, 15,000, and 22,000 cycles between 5^\circC and 60^\circC or stored in water at 37^\circC for 33 days. After aging, K_\mathrm{IC} values of disks were determined by a Vickers indentation technique. Statistical analyses indicated that the K_\mathrm{IC} values of ion‐exchanged and annealed disks were not significantly affected by the limited number of cycles and water storage, while the thermally tempered and untreated disks revealed a significant decrease in mean K_\mathrm{IC} from even 8000 cycles and after storage. However, there was no significant difference between thermocycling and water‐storage effects on mean K_\mathrm{IC} of all surface treatment groups. Results indicate that chemical tempering (ion exchange) produced more durable residual stresses than does thermal tempering for metal‐ceramic restorations. A low‐thermal load only was unlikely to affect the apparent fracture toughness of porcelain.
Keywords: Porcelain, ion exchange, thermal tempering, durability, fracture toughness
Journal: Bio-Medical Materials and Engineering, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 135-143, 1999
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