Influence of ethanol concentration on softening tests for cross-link density evaluation of dental composites

This study investigated the influence of ethanol concentration on softening tests for cross-link density evaluation (microhardness) of dental composites. Specimens of Filtek Z100 (3M ESPE) were light-activated by standard or pulse-delay methods. After initial Knoop hardness readings (KHN1), half of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moraes,Rafael Ratto de (author)
Other Authors: Schneider,Luis Felipe Jochims (author), Correr-Sobrinho,Lourenço (author), Consani,Simonides (author), Sinhoreti,Mário Alexandre Coelho (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-14392007000100017
Country:Brazil
Oai:oai:scielo:S1516-14392007000100017
Description
Summary:This study investigated the influence of ethanol concentration on softening tests for cross-link density evaluation (microhardness) of dental composites. Specimens of Filtek Z100 (3M ESPE) were light-activated by standard or pulse-delay methods. After initial Knoop hardness readings (KHN1), half of specimens (n = 10) for each irradiation method was stored in 100% ethanol, and half in 75% ethanol, during 24 hours, and hardness was determined anew. Hardness deterioration (DKHN) was recorded as the difference between pre and post-storage values. KHN1 data were submitted to one-way ANOVA and Tukey's test (alpha = 0.05), and hardness deterioration was analyzed by two-way ANOVA and Tukey's test (alpha= 0.05). For KHN1, no significant differences were detected between the activation modes (p = 0.697). Samples light-activated by the pulse-delay method presented significantly higher softening compared to the standard mode when samples were immersed in 100% ethanol. Conversely, no significant differences between curing modes were detected for samples stored in 75% ethanol.