The Indian Dental Academy is the Leader in continuing dental education , training dentists in all aspects of dentistry and offering a wide range of dental certified courses in different formats.
Dental composite /certified fixed orthodontic courses by Indian dental academy
1. DENTAL COMPOSITES
INDIAN DENTAL ACADEMY
Leader in continuing dental education
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
2. COMPOSITE CHEMISTRY
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Dental composite is composed of a resin matrix and filler materials.
Coupling agents are used to improve adherence of resin to filler
surfaces.
Activation systems including heat, chemical and photochemical
initiate polymerization.
Plasticizers are solvents that contain catalysts for mixture into resin.
Monomer, a single molecule, is joined together to form a polymer, a
long chain of monomers.
Physical characteristics improve by combining more than one type
of monomer and are referred to as a copolymer.
Cross linking monomers join long chain polymers together along the
chain and improve strength.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
3. RESIN MATERIALS
•
•
•
•
BIS-GMA resin is the base for composite. In the late 1950's, Bowen
mixed bisphenol A and glycidylmethacrylate thinned with TEGDMA
(triethylene glycol dimethacrylate) to form the first BIS-GMA resin.
Diluents are added to increase flow and handling characteristics or
provide cross linking for improved strength. Common examples are:
RESIN:BIS-GMA
bisphenol glycidylmethacrylate
DILUENTS:- MMA
methylmethacrylate
BIS-DMA bisphenol dimethacrylate
UDMA
urethane dimethacrylate
CROSS LINK DILUENTS
TEGDMA triethylene glycol dimethacrylate
EGDMA
ethylene glycol dimethacrylate
www.indiandentalacademy.com
4. COUPLING AGENTS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Coupling agents are used to improve adherence of resin to filler
surfaces.
Coupling agents chemically coat filler surfaces and increase
strength.
Silanes have been used to coat fillers for over fifty years in industrial
plastics and later in dental fillers. Today, they are still state of the
art.
Silanes have disadvantages. They age quickly in a bottle and
become ineffective. Silanes are sensitive to water so the silane filler
bond breaks down with moisture.
Water absorbed into composites results in hydrolysis of the silane
bond and eventual filler loss.
Common silane agents are:
vinyl triethoxysilane
methacryloxypropyltrimethoxysilane
www.indiandentalacademy.com
5. HEAT CATALYST
•
•
•
•
•
•
Polymerization of resin requires initiation by a free radical.
Initiation starts propagation or continued joining of molecules at
double bonds until termination is reached.
Heat applied to initiators breaks down chemical structure to produce
free radicals, however, monomers may polymerize when heat is
applied even without initiators.
Resins require stabilizers to avoid spontaneous polymerization.
Stabilizers are also used to control the reaction of activators and
resin mixtures.
Hydroquinone is most commonly used as a stabilizer.
Common heat based initiators are peroxides such as
benzoylperoxide
t-butylperoxide
t-cumythydroxyperoxide
www.indiandentalacademy.com
6. PHOTOCHEMICAL CATALYST
•
•
•
Early photochemical systems used were benzoin methyl ether which
is sensitive to UV wavelengths at 365 nm. UV systems had limited
use as depth of cure was limited. Visible light activation of
diketones is the preferred photochemical systems. Diketones
activate by visible, blue light to produce slow reactions. Amines are
added to accelerate curing time.
Presently, different composites use different photochemical
systems. These systems are activated by different wavelengths of
light. In addition, different curing lights produce various ranges of
wavelengths that might not match composite activation
wavelengths. This can result in no cure or partial cure. Composite
materials must be matched to curing lights.
Common photochemical initiators are:
Camphoroquinone
Acenaphthene quinone
Benzyl
www.indiandentalacademy.com
7. LIGHT CURING
•
Light curing can be accomplished with:1) Quartz-Tungsten-Halogen
2) Plasma Arc Curing
3) Light Emitting Diode
www.indiandentalacademy.com
8. CHEMICAL CATALYST
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Chemical activation of peroxides produces free radicals. Chemical
accelerators are often not color stable and have been improved for
this reason.
The term self cure or dual cure (when combined with photo
chemical initiation) describes chemical cure materials.
Chemical composites mix a base paste and a catalyst paste for self
cure.
Bonding agents mix two liquids.
Mixing two pastes incorporates air into the composite.
Oxygen inhibits curing resulting in a weaker restoration.
Chemical accelerators include:
Dimethyl p-toludine
N,N-bis(hydroxy-lower-alkyl)-3,5-xylidine
www.indiandentalacademy.com
9. COMPOSITE FILLERS
•
•
•
Fillers are placed in dental composites to reduce shrinkage upon
curing.
Physical properties of composite are improved by fillers, however,
composite characteristics change based on filler material, surface,
size, load, shape, surface modifiers, optical index, filler load and
size distribution.
Materials such as strontium glass, barium glass, quartz, borosilicate
glass, ceramic, silica, prepolymerized resin, or the like are used.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
10. FILLERS CLASSIFICATION
•
•
•
•
•
•
Fillers are classified by material, shape and size.
Fillers are irregular or spherical in shape depending on the mode of
manufacture.
Spherical particles are easier to incorporate into a resin mix and to
fill more space leaving less resin.
One size spherical particle occupies a certain space.
Adding smaller particles fills the space between the larger particles
to take up more space.
There is less resin remaining and therefore, less shrinkage on
curing the more size particles used in proper distribution.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
11. FILLERS CLASSIFICATION
• Classification According to Size:MACROFILLERS ---- 10
TO 100 um
MIDIFILLERS
----- 1
TO 10 um
MINIFILLERS
----- 0.1 TO 1 um
MICROFILLERS ----- 0.01 TO 0.1 um
NANOFILLERS ----- 0.005 TO 0.01 um
www.indiandentalacademy.com
12. PLASTICIZERS
•
•
•
•
Dental composite is composed of a resin matrix and filler materials.
Coupling agents are used to improve adherence of resin to filler
surfaces.
Plasticizers are solvents that contain catalysts for mixture into resin.
They need to be non reactive to the catalyst & resin.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
13. Physical Characteristics
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Following are the imp physical properties:1) Linear coefficient of thermal expansion (LCTE)
2) Water Absorption
3) Wear resistance
4) Surface texture
5) Radiopacity
6) Modulus of elasticity
7) Solubility
www.indiandentalacademy.com
14. C- FACTOR
•
•
It is the ratio of the bonded surfaces to the unbonded or free
surfaces in a tooth preparation.
The higher the C-Factor, greater is the potential for bond disruption
from polymerisation effects.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
15. INTERNAL STRESSES
•
Internal stresses can be reduced by,
1) ‘Self start’ Polymerisation
2) Incremental placement
3) Use of stress breaking liners such as:a)Filled Dentinal Adhesives
b)RMGI.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
16. COMPOSITE CLASSIFICATION
•
•
•
•
•
Composite is classified by initiation techniques, filler size, and
viscosity.
Laboratory heat process fillings are processed under nitrogen and
pressure to produce a more thorough cure.
Core build up materials are commonly self cure.
Dual cure composite is commonly used as a cementing medium
under crowns.
Viscosity determines flow characteristics during placement. A
flowable composite flows like liquid or a loose gel. A packable
composite is firm and hard to displace.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
17. Composite is classified by initiation
techniques, filler size, and viscosity
•
•
•
•
Heat cured composites are polymerized by application of heat.
Self cured composite means chemical initiation converting monomer
to polymer takes place.
Light cured composite means photochemical initiation causes
polymerization
Dual cure means chemical initiation is used and combined with
photochemical initiation so either and both techniques polymerize
composite.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
18. Radiospacity
•
•
•
•
One of the requirements of using a composite as a posterior
restorative is that it should be radiopaque.
In order for a material to be described as being radiopaque, the
International Standard Organization (ISO) specifies that it should
have radiopacity equivalent to 1 mm of aluminium, which is
approximately equal to natural tooth dentine.
However, there has been a move to increase the radiopacity to be
equivalent to 2 mm of aluminium, which is approximately equal to
natural tooth enamel.
A majority of the composites described as all-purpose or universal
have levels of radiopacity greater than 2 mm of aluminium
www.indiandentalacademy.com
19. INDICATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
1) Class-I, II, III, IV, V & VI restorations.
2) Foundations or core buildups.
3) Sealant & Preventive resin restorations.
4) Esthetic enhancement procedures.
5) Luting
6) Temporary restorations
7) Periodontal splinting.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
20. CONTRAINDICATIONS
•
•
•
•
1) Inability to isolate the site.
2) Excessive masticatory forces.
3) Restorations extending to the root surfaces.
4) Other operator errors.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
22. DISADVANTAGES
•
•
•
•
•
1) May result in gap formation when restoration extends to the root
surface.
2) Technique sensitive.
3) Expensive
4) May exhibit more occlusal wear in areas of higher stresses.
5) Higher linear coefficient of thermal expansion.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
23. STEPS IN COMPOSITE
RESTORATION
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
1) Local anaesthesia.
2) Preparation of the operating site.
3) Shade selection
4) Isolation of the operating site.
5) Tooth preparation.
6) preliminary steps of enamel and dentin bonding.
7) Matrix placement.
8) Inserting the composite.
9) Contouring the composite.
10) polishing the composite.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
24. PRINCIPLES OF ANTERIOR
COMPOSITE RESTORATION
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
1. Smile Design
2. Color and Color Analysis
3. Tooth Color
4. Tooth Shape
5. Tooth Position
6. Esthetic Goals
7. Composite Selection
8. Tooth Preparation
9. Bonding Techniques
10. Composite Placement
11. Composite Sculpture and
12. Composite Polishing to properly restore anterior teeth with
composite:
www.indiandentalacademy.com
25. 1. SMILE DESIGN
•
•
A dentist must understand proper smile design so composite
restoration can achieve a beautiful smile. This is true for extensive
veneering and small restorations.
Factors which are considered in smile design include:A. Smile Form which includes size in relation to the face, size of one
tooth to another, gingival contours to the upper lip line, incisal edges
overall to the lower lip line, arch position, teeth shape and size,
perspective, and midline.
B. Teeth Form which includes understanding long axis, incisal edge,
surface contours, line angles, contact areas, embrasure form, height
of contour, surface texture, characterization, and tissue contours
within an overall smile design.
C. Tooth Color of gingival, middle, incisal, and interproximal areas
and the intricacies of characterization within an overall smile design.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
26. 2. COLOUR AND COLOUR
ANALYSIS
•
•
Colour is a study in and of itself. In dentistry, the effect of enamel
rods, surface contours, surface textures, dentinal light absorption,
etc. on light transmission and reflection is difficult to understand and
even more difficult replicate.
The intricacies of understanding matching and replicating hue,
chroma, value, translucency, florescence; light transmission,
reflection and refraction to that of a natural tooth under various light
sources is essential but far beyond the scope of this article.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
27. 3. TOOTH COLOUR
•
•
•
•
•
Analysis of colour variation within teeth is improved by an
understanding of how teeth produce color variation.
Enamel is prismatic and translucent which results in a blue gray
color on the incisal edge, interproximal areas and areas of
increased thickness at the junction of lobe formations.
The gingival third of a tooth appears darker as enamel thins and
dentin shows through.
Color deviation, such as craze lines or hypocalcifications, within
dentin or enamel can cause further color variation.
Aging has a profound effect on color caused by internal or external
staining, enamel wear and cracking, caries, acute trauma and
dentistry.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
28. 4. TOOTH SHAPE
•
•
•
•
Understanding tooth shape requires studying dental anatomy.
Studying anatomy of teeth requires recognition of general form,
detail anatomy and internal anatomy.
It is important to know ideal anatomy and anatomy as a result of
aging, disease, trauma and wear.
Knowledge of anatomy allows a dentist to reproduce natural teeth.
For example, a craze line is not a straight line as often is produced
by a dentist, but is a more irregular form guided by enamel rods.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
29. 5. TOOTH POSITION
•
•
•
•
Knowledge of normal position and axial tilt of teeth within a head,
lips, and arches allows reproduction of natural beautiful smiles.
Understanding the goals of an ideal smile and compromises from
limitations of treatment allows realistic expectations of a dentist and
patient.
Often, learning about tooth position is easily done through denture
esthetics.
Ideal and normal variations of tooth position is emphasized in
removable prosthetics so a denture look does not occur.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
30. 6. ESTHETIC GOALS
•
•
•
•
The results of esthetic dentistry are limited by limitations of ideals
and limitations of treatment.
Ideals of the golden proportion have been replaced by preconceived
perceptions.
Limitations of ideals are based on physical, environmental and
psychological factors.
Limitations of treatment are base on physical, financial and
psychological factors.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
31. 7. COMPOSITE SELECTION
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Esthetic dentistry is an art form. There are different levels of
appreciation so individual dentists evaluate results of esthetic
dentistry differently. Artistically dentists select composites based on
their level of appreciation, artistic ability and knowledge of specific
materials. Factors which influence composite selection include
A- Restoration Strength,
B- Wear
C- Restoration Color
D- Placement characteristics.
E- Ability to use and combine opaquers and tints.
F- Ease of shaping.
G- Polishing characteristics.
H- Polish and colour stability
www.indiandentalacademy.com
32. 8. TOOTH PREPARATION
•
•
•
Tooth preparation often defines restoration strength.
Small tooth defects which receive minimal force require minimal
tooth preparation because only bond strength is required to provide
retention and resistance.
In larger tooth defects where maximum forces are applied,
mechanical retention and resistance with increased bond area can
be required to provide adequate strength.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
33. 9. BONDING TECHNIQUES
•
•
•
Understanding techniques to bond composite to dentin and enamel
provide strength, elimination of sensitivity and prevention of microleakage.
Enamel bonding is a well understood science. Dentinal bonding,
however, is constantly changing as more research is being done
and requires constant periodic review.
Micro-etching combined with composite bonding techniques to old
composite, porcelain, and metal must be understood to do anterior
composite repairs.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
34. 10. COMPOSITE PLACEMENT
TECHNIQUE
•
•
•
Understanding techniques which allow ease of placement, minimize
effects of shrinkage, eliminate air entrapment and prevent material
from pulling back from tooth structure during instrumentation
determine ultimate success or failure of a restoration.
It is important to incorporate proper instrumentation to allow ease of
shaping tooth anatomy and provide color variation prior to curing
composite.
In addition, a dentist must understand placement of various
composite layers with varying opacities and color to replicate normal
tooth structure.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
35. 11. COMPOSITE SCULPTURE
•
•
Composite sculpture of cured composite is properly done if
appropriate use of polishing strips, burs, cups, wheels and points is
understood.
In addition, proper use of instrumentation maximizes esthetics and
allows minimal heat or vibrational trauma to composite resulting in a
long lasting restoration.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
36. 12. COMPOSITE POLISHING
•
•
Polishing composite to allow a smooth or textured surface shiny
produces realistic, natural restorations.
Proper use of polishing strips, burs, cups, wheels and points with
water or polish pastes as required minimizes heat generation and
vibration trauma to composite material for a long lasting restoration.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
37. DIRECT POSTERIOR
COMPOSITES
•
•
•
•
Composites are indicated for Class 1, class 2 and class 5 defects on
premolars and molars. Ideally, an isthmus width of less than one
third the intercuspal distance is required.
This requirement is balanced against forces created on remaining
tooth structure and composite material. Forces are analyzed by
direction, frequency, duration and intensity. High force occurs with
low angle cases, in molar areas, with strong muscles, point contacts
and parafunctional forces such as grinding and biting finger nails.
Composite is strongest in compressive strength and weakest in
shear, tensile and modulus of elasticity strengths. Controlling forces
by preparation design and occlusal contacts can be critical to
restorative success.
Failure of a restoration occurs if composite fractures, tooth fractures,
composite debonds from tooth structure or micro-leakage and
subsequent caries occurs. A common area of failure is direct point
contact by sharp opposing cusps. Enameloplasty that creates a
three point contact in fossa or flat contacts is often indicated.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
39. •
•
•
•
•
Tooth preparation requires adequate access to remove caries,
removal of caries, elimination of weak tooth structure that could
fracture, beveling of enamel to maximize enamel bond strength, and
extension into defective areas such as stained grooves and
decalcified areas.
Matrix systems are placed to contain materials within the tooth and
form proper interproximal contours and contacts. Selection of a
matrix system should vary depending on the situation (see web
pages contacts and contours in this section).
Enamel and dentin bonding is completed. Composite shrinks when
cured so large areas must be layered to minimize negative forces.
Generally, any area thicker than two millimeters requires layering.
In addition, cavity preparation produces multiple wall defects.
Composite curing when touching multiple walls creates dramatic
stress and should be avoided.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
41. •
•
•
•
Composite built in layers replicate tooth structure by placing dentin
layers first and then enamel layers.
Final contouring with hand instruments is ideal to minimize the
trauma of shaping with burs.
Matrix systems are removed and refined shaping and occlusal
adjustment done with a 245 bur and a flame shaped finishing bur.
Interproximal buccal and lingual areas are trimmed of excess with a
flame shaped finishing bur.
Final polish is achieved with polishing cups, points, sandpaper
disks, and polishing paste.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
43. INDIRECT POSTERIOR
COMPOSITES
•
•
Indirect laboratory composite is indicated on teeth that required
large restorations but have a significant amount of tooth remaining.
It is used when a tooth defect is larger than indicated for direct
composite and smaller than indicated for a crown. A common
situation is fracture of a single cusp on a molar or a thin cusp on a
bicuspid. Force analysis is critical to success as high force will
fracture composite, tooth structure or separate bonded interfaces.
High force is indicated on teeth furthest back in the mouth for
example, a second molar receives five times more force than a
bicuspid. Orthodontic low angle cases and large masseter muscles
generate high force. Sharp point contacts from opposing teeth
create immense force and are often altered with enameloplasty.
Indirect composite restorations are processed in a laboratory under
heat, pressure and nitrogen to produce a more thorough composite
cure. Pressure and heat increase cure while nitrogen eliminates
oxygen that inhibits cure. Increased cure results in stronger
restorations. Strength of laboratory processed composite is
between composite and crown strength and requires adequate tooth
support.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
44. TOOTH PREPARATION
•
•
•
•
•
Tooth preparation requires removal of existing restorations and
caries. Thin cusps and enamel are removed in combination of
blocking out undercuts with composite, glass ionomer, flowable
composite or the like.
Tooth preparation requires adequate wall divergence to bond and
cement the restoration and ideally, margins should finish in enamel.
The restoration floor is bonded and light cured.
Bonding agent is light cured to stabilize collagen fibers and avoid
collapse during restoration placement. A base of glass ionomer or
composite is used if thermal sensitivity is anticipated.
Restoration retention is judged by bonded surface area, number and
location of retentive walls, divergence of retentive walls, height to
width ratio and restoration internal and external shape.
Resistance form, reduction of internal stress and conversion of
potential shear and tensile forces is accomplished by smoothing
sharp areas and creating flat floors as opposed to external angular
walls.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
45. TOOTH PREPARATION
•
•
•
•
•
Impressions are taken of prepared teeth, models poured and
composite restorations constructed at a laboratory. Temporaries are
placed and a second appointment made.
At a second appointment, temporaries are removed and a rubber
dam placed. Restorations are tried on the teeth and
adjusted. Manufacturers directions are followed. In general,
bonding is completed on the tooth surfaces and bonding resin
precured.
Matrix bands are placed prior to etching to contain etch within
prepared areas. Trimming of excess cement where no etching has
occurred is easier.
Composite surfaces are silinated and dual cure resin cement
applied. Restorations are seated, excess resin cement is wiped
away with a brush and then facial and lingual surfaces are light
cured. Interproximal areas are flossed and then light cured. Excess
is trimmed with hand instruments and finishing flame shaped burs.
The rubber dam is removed and occlusion adjusted. Surfaces are
finished and polished.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
46. COMPOSITE WEAR
•
•
•
There are several mechanisms of composite wear including
adhesive wear, abrasive wear, fatigue, and chemical wear.
Adhesive wear is created by extremely small contacts and therefore
extremely high forces, of two opposing surfaces. When small forces
release, material is removed. All surfaces have microscopic
roughness which is where extremely small contacts occur between
opposing surfaces.
Abrasive wear is when a rough material gouges out material on an
opposing surface. A harder surface gouges a softer surface.
Materials are not uniform so hard materials in a soft matrix, such as
filler in resin, gouge resin and opposing surfaces. Fatigue causes
wear. Constant repeated force causes substructure deterioration
and eventual loss of surface material. Chemical wear occurs when
environmental materials such s saliva, acids or like affect a surface.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
47. COMPOSITE FRACTURE
•
•
•
Dental composite is composed of a resin matrix and filler materials.
The resin filler interface is important for most physical properties.
There are three causes of stress on this interface including: resin
shrinkage pulls on fillers, filler modulus of elasticity is higher than
resin, and filler thermo coefficient of expansion allows resin to
expand more with heat. When fracture occurs, a crack propagates
and strikes a filler particle. Resin pulls away from filler particle
surfaces during failure. This type of failure is more difficult with
larger particles as surface area is greater. A macrofill composite is
stronger than a microfill composite.
Coupling agents are used to improve adherence of resin to filler
surfaces. Modification of filler physical structure on the surface or
aggregating filler particles create mechanical locking to improve
interface strength. Coupling agents chemically coat filler surfaces
and increase strength. Silanes have been used to coat fillers for
over fifty years in industrial plastics and later in dental fillers. Today,
they are still state of the art.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
49. Multifunctional Composites and
Novel Microstructures
•
•
•
•
•
•
Hierarchical microstructures
- Dr H-X Peng
The properties of composite materials can be tailored through
microstructural design at different lengthscales such as the microand nano-structural level.
At the micro-structural level, our novel approach creates
microstructures with controlled inhomogeneous reinforcement
distributions.
These microstructures effectively contain more than one structural
hierarchy. This has the potential to create whole new classes of
composite materials with superior single properties and property
combinations.
Research also involves tailoring the nano-structures of microwires/ribbons for macro-composites.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
50. Shaped fibres
•
•
•
•
•
- Dr Ian Bond, Dr Paul Weaver
Research has shown that shaped fibres can be an effective means
of improving the through thickness properties.
A set of guidelines for fibre shape and a preferred ‘family’ of fibres
have been generated from qualitative analysis for the role of
reinforcing fibres in composites.
Methods have also been developed to produce such shaped fibres
from glass in order to form reinforced laminates in sufficient quantity
for materials property testing using standard methods.
Fibre shape has been shown to play a key role in contributing to the
bonding force between fibre and matrix, with significant increases in
fracture toughness possible. Results suggest that the shaped fibre
specimens have a greater throughthickness strength than the
circular fibre composites that are currently used.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
51. Self healing
•
•
•
•
•
•
- Dr Ian Bond
Impact damage to composite structures can result in a drastic
reduction in mechanical properties. Bio-inspired approach is
adopted to effect selfhealing which can be described as mechanical,
thermal or chemically induced damage that is autonomically
repaired by materials already contained within the structure.
Efforts are undergoing to manufacture and incorporate
multifunctional hollow fibres to generate healing and vascular
networks within both composite laminates and sandwich structures.
The release of repair agent from these embedded storage
reservoirs mimics the bleeding mechanism in biological organisms.
Once cured, the healing resin provides crack arrest and recovery of
mechanical integrity.
It is also possible to introduce UV fluorescent dye into the resin,
which will illuminate any damage/healing events that the structure
has undergone, thereby simplifying the inspection process for
subsequent permanent repair.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
52. Fibre Reinforced Dental Resins
•
•
•
•
•
- Dr Ian Bond and Professor Daryll Jagger
The material most commonly used in the construction of dentures is
poly (methyl methacrylate) and although few would dispute that
satisfactory aesthetics can be achieved with this material, in terms
of mechanical properties it is still far from ideal.
Over the years there have been various attempts to improve the
mechanical properties of the resin including the search for an
alternative material, such as nylon, the chemical modification of the
resin through the incorporation of butadiene styrene as in the "high
impact resins" and the incorporation of fibres such as carbon, glass
and polyethylene.
The use of self-healing technology within dental resins is a novel
and exciting approach to solve the problems of the failing dental
resins.
Methods are currently being developed to translate the self healing
resin technology into dental and biomaterials science.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
53. Nanofibres and Nanocomposites
•
•
•
•
•
- Dr Bo Su
An electrospinning technique has been used to produce polymer,
ceramic and nanocomposite nanofibres for wound addressing,
tissue engineering and dental composites applications.
The electrospun nanofibres have typical diameters of 100-500 nm.
Natural biopolymers, such as alginate, chitosan, gelatin and
collagen nanofibres, have been investigated.
Novel nanocomposites, such as Ag nanoparticles doped alginate
nanofibres and alginate/chitosan core-shell nanofibres, have also
been investigated for antimicrobials and tissue engineering
scaffolds.
Zirconia and silica nanofibre/epoxy composites are currently under
investigation for dental fillings and aesthetic orthodontic archwires.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
54. Nanocomposites
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
- Dr H-X Peng
Carbon fibre composite components are susceptible to sand and
rain erosion as well as cutting by sharp objects.
The use of nanomaterials in coating formulations can lead to wearresistant nanocomposite coatings.
Work is developing novel fine-particle filled polymer coating systems
with a
potential step-change in erosion resistance and exploring their
application to composite propellers and blades.
These tailored materials also have potential applications in lightning
strike protection and de-icing.
The nano-structure of magnetic micro-ribbons/wires is being
investigated and optimised to obtain the Giant Magneto-Impedance
(GMI) effect for high sensitivity magnetic sensor applications.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
55. Composites with Magnetic
Function
•
•
•
•
•
- Dr Ian Bond, Prof. Phil Mellor and Dr H-X Peng
The main aim of this work is to examine methods ofincluding
magnetic materials within a composite whilst maintaining structural
performance.
This has been achieved by filling hollow fibres with a suspension of
magnetic materials after manufacture of the composite component.
Research is continuing to tailor the magnetic properties of the
composite to other applications.
In another approach, magnetic microribbons and microwires are
being tailored and embedded into macrocomposite materials to
provide magnetic sensing functions.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
56. Auxetics
•
•
•
•
- Dr Fabrizio Scarpa
Auxetic solids expand in all directions when pulled in only one,
therefore exhibiting a negative Poisson’s ratio.
New concepts are being develope for composite materials, foams
and elastomers with auxetic characteristics for aerospace, maritime
and ergonomics applications.
The use of smart material technologies and negative Poisson’s ratio
solids has also led to the development of smart auxetics for active
sound management, vibroacoustics and structural health
monitoring.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
57. Diamond Fibre Composites
•
•
•
•
- Dr Paul May and Professor Mike Ashfold
Researchers in the CVD Diamond Film Lab based in the School of
Chemistry are investigating ways to make diamond fibre reinforced
composites.
The diamond fibres are made by coating thin (100 mm diameter)
tungsten wires with a uniform coating of polycrystalline diamond
using hot filament chemical vapour deposition.
The diamond-coated wires are extremely stiff and rigid, and can be
embedded into a matrix material (such as a metal or plastic) to
make a stiff but lightweight composite material with anisotropic
properties. Such materials may have applications in the aerospace
industry.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
58. Novel Multifunctional Fibre
Composites
•
•
•
•
- Professor Steve Mann
New types of composites with a combination of strength, toughness
and functionality are being prepared by combining research in the
synthesis of inorganic non-particles with that in the synthesis of
organic polymers.
This interdisciplinary approach has been used to produce flexible
fibres of magnetic spider silk as shown in the photograph (left). Silk
fibres are coated by a dipping procedure using dilute suspensions of
inorganic nano-particles that are prepared with specific surface
properties.
Similar methods are being investigated with swellable polymer gels
and bacterial supercellular fibres to produce novel hybrid
composites.
www.indiandentalacademy.com