This study examined the influence of different surface conditioning methods on composite-to-composite microtensile bond strength. Thirty two-year old composite resin discs were randomly divided into three groups according to the different mechanical/chemical surface pretreatment tested: (1) 38% hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2)-treatment; (2) 50-μm aluminum oxide sandblasting; (3) no treatment. Depending on the intermediate agent applied, two subgroups were created: (A) three-step adhesive system; (B) prehydrolyzed silane coupling agent + three-step adhesive system. Microtensile bond strength measurements were performed and the data were statistically analyzed with Kruskall-Wallis Analysis of Variance and Dunn's multiple range test for post hoc comparisons (p < 0.05). Failure mode was evaluated with a scanning electron microscope. Changes in composite surface topography after H 2O 2 treatment were also investigated. Composite repair strength did not benefit from H 2O 2 treatment and adhesive application. Preliminary sandblasting significantly improved interfacial bond strength regardless of the intermediate agent applied. No changes in surface texture were produced after H 2O 2 treatment. An atypical fracture pattern was detected at the interfacial level between H 2O 2-treated composite surfaces and the overlying adhesive and composite. H 2O 2 treatment affected the composite-to-composite repair strength: a compromised resin polymerization may occur, resulting in a poor interfacial quality and a weak bond. Sandblasting still remains a reliable technique for composite repair. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

The application of hydrogen peroxide in composite repair / Federica, Papacchini; Francesca, Monticelli; Ivana, Radovic; Nicoletta, Chieffi; Cecilia, Goracci; Franklin R., Tay; Polimeni, Antonella; Marco, Ferrari. - In: JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH. PART B, APPLIED BIOMATERIALS.. - ISSN 1552-4973. - 82:2(2007), pp. 298-304. [10.1002/jbm.b.30733]

The application of hydrogen peroxide in composite repair

POLIMENI, Antonella;
2007

Abstract

This study examined the influence of different surface conditioning methods on composite-to-composite microtensile bond strength. Thirty two-year old composite resin discs were randomly divided into three groups according to the different mechanical/chemical surface pretreatment tested: (1) 38% hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2)-treatment; (2) 50-μm aluminum oxide sandblasting; (3) no treatment. Depending on the intermediate agent applied, two subgroups were created: (A) three-step adhesive system; (B) prehydrolyzed silane coupling agent + three-step adhesive system. Microtensile bond strength measurements were performed and the data were statistically analyzed with Kruskall-Wallis Analysis of Variance and Dunn's multiple range test for post hoc comparisons (p < 0.05). Failure mode was evaluated with a scanning electron microscope. Changes in composite surface topography after H 2O 2 treatment were also investigated. Composite repair strength did not benefit from H 2O 2 treatment and adhesive application. Preliminary sandblasting significantly improved interfacial bond strength regardless of the intermediate agent applied. No changes in surface texture were produced after H 2O 2 treatment. An atypical fracture pattern was detected at the interfacial level between H 2O 2-treated composite surfaces and the overlying adhesive and composite. H 2O 2 treatment affected the composite-to-composite repair strength: a compromised resin polymerization may occur, resulting in a poor interfacial quality and a weak bond. Sandblasting still remains a reliable technique for composite repair. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
2007
hydrogen peroxide; interface; repair strength; sandblasting; silane
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
The application of hydrogen peroxide in composite repair / Federica, Papacchini; Francesca, Monticelli; Ivana, Radovic; Nicoletta, Chieffi; Cecilia, Goracci; Franklin R., Tay; Polimeni, Antonella; Marco, Ferrari. - In: JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH. PART B, APPLIED BIOMATERIALS.. - ISSN 1552-4973. - 82:2(2007), pp. 298-304. [10.1002/jbm.b.30733]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/108984
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