Material properties and effects on mechanotherapy∗∗Parts of this chapter appear by permission of Elsevier in a chapter entitled Dental Materials Science and Orthodontics from the 6th edition of Orthodontics: Current Principles and Techniques (Graber LW, Vanarsdall RL Jr, Vig KWL, Huang GJ, editors), Elsevier, 2016.

Author(s):  
T. Eliades ◽  
T.G. Bradley ◽  
W. Brantley
RSC Advances ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (22) ◽  
pp. 13152-13163
Author(s):  
Wei Chen ◽  
Wen-qing Zhu ◽  
Jing Qiu

The development of effective methods to promote the osseointegration of dental implants by surface modification is an area of intense research in dental materials science.


2021 ◽  
Vol 56 (18) ◽  
pp. 10707-10744
Author(s):  
Jonathan Torres ◽  
Ali P. Gordon

AbstractThe small punch test (SPT) was developed for situations where source material is scarce, costly or otherwise difficult to acquire, and has been used for assessing components with variable, location-dependent material properties. Although lacking standardization, the SPT has been employed to assess material properties and verified using traditional testing. Several methods exist for equating SPT results with traditional stress–strain data. There are, however, areas of weakness, such as fracture and fatigue approaches. This document outlines the history and methodologies of SPT, reviewing the body of contemporary literature and presenting relevant findings and formulations for correlating SPT results with conventional tests. Analysis of literature is extended to evaluating the suitability of the SPT for use with additively manufactured (AM) materials. The suitability of this approach is shown through a parametric study using an approximation of the SPT via FEA, varying material properties as would be seen with varying AM process parameters. Equations describing the relationship between SPT results and conventional testing data are presented. Correlation constants dictating these relationships are determined using an accumulation of data from the literature reviewed here, along with novel experimental data. This includes AM materials to assess the fit of these and provide context for a wider view of the methodology and its interest to materials science and additive manufacturing. A case is made for the continued development of the small punch test, identifying strengths and knowledge gaps, showing need for standardization of this simple yet highly versatile method for expediting studies of material properties and optimization.


2007 ◽  
Vol 361-363 ◽  
pp. 805-808 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.C. Murphy ◽  
M.P. Hofmann ◽  
J.L. O’Beirne ◽  
K.S. Coomaraswamy ◽  
R.M. Shelton

Mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) is a slow setting Portland cement (PC) based dental material for endodontic applications. The present study investigated the effect of adding either CaCl2 or Plaster of Paris (PoP) as setting accelerators on the development of the material properties and microstructure with reaction time for a PC based model system. Mechanical strength, density and relative porosity were measured after 1, 10 and 30days and the microstructure was assessed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The strength of all cements increased with time whereas material density and relative porosity decreased due to the progress of the hydration reaction. Cements with 5-10% CaCl2 in the liquid phase had a higher final strength and lower porosity than cements modified with 20wt% PoP in the cement powder, whilst PoP modified cement had a shorter setting time of 15min compared with 60min for 10% CaCl2 addition. The microstructure of the two modifications were noticeably different, with the CaCl2 modified cement having more interconnected needle-like crystals than seen in PoP modified cements, which may explain the higher strength of this cement.


1988 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Ferrante ◽  
Stephen V. Pepper

AbstractTribology, the science and engineering of solid surfaces in moving contact, is a field that encompasses many disciplines: solid state physics, chemistry, materials science, and mechanical engineering. In spite of the practical importance and maturity of the field, the fundamental understanding of basic phenomena has only recently been attacked. In this paper we will attempt to define some of these problems and indicate some profitable directions for future research. We make three broad classifications: (1) fluid properties--compression, rheology, additives and particulates; (2) material properties of the solids--deformation, defect formation and energy loss mechanisms; and (3) interfacial properties--adhesion, friction chemical reactions, and boundary films. Research in the categories has traditionally been approached by considering macroscopic material properties. Recent activity has shown that some issues can be approached at the atomic level: that is, the atoms in the materials can be manipulated both experimentally and theoretically, and can produce results related to macroscopic phenomena. This experimental and theoretical activity is reviewed and related to the traditional research areas.


Author(s):  
Vitaliy Anatol’evich Parunov ◽  
M. A Kareva ◽  
S. D Tykochinskiy ◽  
I. Yu Lebedenko

The article shows the creation of a new Russian base alloy of palladium for metal-ceramic dental prostheses “Palladini UNI” puteam comprehensive analysis of the influence of alloying elements on the phase structure of the palladium alloys, physical and mechanical properties and coefficient of thermal linear expansion.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Beau W. Webber

AbstractThe intention of this discussion is as a simple introduction for general—non-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-specialist—materials scientists, to make them aware as to how some of the materials science measurements that they need to make might possibly be addressed by simple physical measurements using low-cost time-domain NMR apparatus. The intention is to include a minimum of complex NMR detail, while enabling general material-scientists to see that simple easily understood time-domain NMR might be of use to them. That is how I have tried to structure this discussion. It seems to me be generally forgotten how much of materials science is actually physics, as opposed to chemistry, and the extent to which simple time-domain NMR may be used to make measurements of the physical properties of materials. There frequently seems to be an assumption that if NMR is mentioned that it is chemical analysis methods that are under discussion, or possibly magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These are both extremely powerful techniques, but to forget about the physics that often governs the properties of the sample can be a significant mistake. Key material science properties are often described in different fields using the terms mobility/dynamics/stiffness/viscosity/rigidity of the sample. These properties are usually dependent on atomic and molecular motion in the sample. We will discuss a method, time-domain NMR, that appears often to be ignored, to obtain quantitative or comparative information on these properties. The intention of this paper is not to probe the material properties of some interesting system, but to discuss in as clear a manner as possible a particular technique, “low-field time-domain NMR”, to bring this technique and its advantages to the attention of other material scientists. Thus we discuss time-domain NMR and MRI, as methods of measuring the physical properties of liquid and solid materials. Time-domain NMR is also a good technique for measuring pore-size distributions from the nano-meter to microns, using a technique known as NMR cryoporometry (NMRC). Standard MRI protocols may be combined with NMRC, so that spatial resolution of pore dimensions may also be obtained. Low-field time-domain NMR is, at its fundamentals, a very approachable and easily comparative technique, where the material properties may often be extracted from the time-domain data much more simply than from say high-field high-resolution spectral data. In addition, low-field time-domain NMR apparatus is typically a factor of 10 to 100 times cheaper than high-field high-resolution solid-state NMR systems.


2017 ◽  
pp. 1420-1441
Author(s):  
Arlindo Silva ◽  
Virginia Infante

Nowadays, the number of commercially available materials is growing steadily. Technical information on materials resides in digital libraries that complement classical Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) textbooks. Information on materials in the form of databases of material properties can elaborate on the science and engineering fundamentals explained in textbooks with real data about current materials. Hence digital libraries can become a learning tool to support teaching of science and engineering fundamentals. This chapter described two courses offered for the Mechanical Engineering degree at Instituto Superior Tecnico, Portugal, namely Materials Science and Materials in Engineering. The Materials Science course uses the traditional textbooks and a bottom-up approach. In the Materials in Engineering course, the CES EduPack database was introduced to support a design-led approach. This chapter showed that the teaching of Materials Science with databases should be encouraged and described a successful experience with teaching Materials in Engineering using digital libraries.


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