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1.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 150: 106335, 2024 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38150817

This study aimed to identify the potential use of the ceramic composite ZrO2(CeO2)-Al2O3 as a dental implant due to its intrinsic geometry and different masticatory loads based on finite element simulations. Ceramic samples were sintered at 1500 °C-2h, and characterized: The mechanical properties of the ceramic composite (hardness, fracture toughness, flexural strength, Young's Modulus, and Poisson ratio) were determined, in addition to the relative density and its structural characteristics. Commercial dental implant designs (incisal and third-molar) on CAD models were used in this study as an initial implant geometry applied in a typical simulated mandible anatomy. Finite element models were generated for implant geometries using CAD and CAE techniques. Loading cases were considered based on different intensities (100-500 N) and orientation angles to the implant axis (0° and 45°) to reproduce human masticatory conditions. For comparison purposes, the numerical predictions were compared with finite element simulations of gold-standard titanium implants. Ce-TZP/Al2O3 sintered ceramics showed flexural strength of 952.6 ± 88 MPa, hardness and fracture toughness of 1427 ± 46 HV and 11.3 ± 0.4 MPa m1/2, respectively, beside Young's modulus of 228.3 ± 65 GPa and Poisson ratio of 0.28. For both Ce-TZP/Al2O3 dental implant geometries, the implant prototypes showed adequate mechanical behavior regardless of the masticatory load value or the orientation angle applied in the simulations: All finite element predictions are lower than the values established by Mohr Coulomb's failure criterion, allowing the feasibility, preliminarily, of the proposed ceramics for dental implant applications without fracture risk.


Dental Implants , Humans , Materials Testing , Zirconium/chemistry , Flexural Strength , Ceramics/chemistry , Stress, Mechanical , Dental Stress Analysis , Surface Properties
2.
J Biomed Mater Res B Appl Biomater ; 111(1): 103-116, 2023 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35849489

Vickers indentation (IF) and single-edge-V-notched beam (SEVNB), to measure the fracture toughness (KIC ) of zirconia-based dental ceramics and mathematical models were proposed to establish a correlation between both. Zirconia (ZrO2 ) stabilized with 3 mol. % of Y2 O3 (3Y-TZP) and 5 mol% of Y2 O3 (5Y-PSZ) were compacted (n = 42) and sintered for 2 h at different temperatures (1475°C, 1500°C, 1550°C, or 1600°C). After sintering, they were characterized by relative density using the ASTM C373-88 standard, X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The average grain size was measured according to the ASTM E1382-97 standard. The fracture toughness (KIC ) was determined using two methods: Vickers indentation fracture toughness (KIC-IF ): method based on mathematical modeling that considers the parameters used for the Vickers hardness test and Fracture toughness by the single-edge-V-notch-beam (KIC-SEVNB ): method proposed by ISO 23146:08. The main phases of the 3Y-TZP and 5Y-PSZ ceramics were ZrO2 -tetragonal and ZrO2 -cubic, respectively. The 3Y-TZP specimens showed equiaxed grains with average grain sizes ranging from 0.55 to 0.79 µm. The grain sizes of 5Y-PSZ of specimens sintered at 1475°C and 1600°C were 0.62 and 2.32 µm, respectively. For all ceramics the crack size ratio was c/a < 2.5, suggesting a Palmqvist-type crack system. The fracture toughness measured by the Vickers indentation method (KIC-IF ) and by the SEVNB method (KIC-SEVNB ) was the same when the experimental data were fit to a mathematical model.


Ceramics , Zirconium , Materials Testing/methods , Hardness Tests , Dental Materials , Surface Properties , Yttrium
3.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 129: 105171, 2022 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35276638

OBJECTIVES: This study investigates the simulation of the mechanical behavior of a bioceramic composite based on (Ce,Y)-TZP reinforced with equiaxed Al2O3 and platelet-shaped hexaaluminate (H6A) grains using Finit Element Method (FEM). METHODS: A commercial (Ce, Y)-TZP/Al2O3 ceramic powder was compacted into disc-shaped specimens that were sintered at 1500 °C for 2 h. The sintered samples were further subjected to hydrothermal degradation in an autoclave at 134 °C, 0.2 MPa, for 10 h and characterized according to their phase composition, microstructure, and relative density. Their flexural strength values were determined by the piston-on-three-ball test, and Weibull statistics was used to evaluate the results. Their hardness, fracture toughness and elastic parameters were also measured. Numerical simulations of the biaxial strength test were performed using the ABAQUS finite element code. RESULTS: The sintered ceramic composite material presented relative density >99%, high resistance to hydrothermal degradation, average hardness of 1435 ± 35 HV, fracture toughness KIC of 9.7 ± 0.5 MPa m1/2, and average biaxial flexural strength of 952.6 ± 88 MPa. The numerical predictions of the biaxial flexural strength showed a consistently lower average biaxial flexural strength value of 880.9 MPa, ∼10% lower than the average experimental results. CONCLUSIONS: The differences observed are attributed to the complex coupled toughness mechanisms of this material, not included in the finite element simulations.


Ceramics , Zirconium , Dental Materials , Flexural Strength , Materials Testing , Surface Properties , Yttrium/chemistry , Zirconium/chemistry
4.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 116: 104372, 2021 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33540326

OBJECTIVES: The objective of this work was the development and characterization of a ceramic composite based on (Ce,Y)-TZP/Al2O3 aiming an application on dental implants, comparing it with conventional monolithic 3Y-TZP ceramics, currently used for the same type of application. METHODS: Ceramic samples, 3Y-TZP (n = 40) and (Ce,Y)-TZP/Al2O3 (n = 40), were sintered at 1500 °C - 2h and characterized by relative density, X-Ray diffraction (XRD) and microstructure. Then, the samples of both materials were divided into two groups: 1) samples with original (as sintered) surfaces; 2) samples with conditioned, polished, surfaces. All samples were submitted to hydrothermal degradation tests, on an autoclave (134 °C - 2 bar), for 10 h in artificial saliva. The degraded samples were characterized by XRD and the polished group were also characterized by their elastic moduli, Vickers hardness and fracture toughness (Vickers indentation method). Both groups were also submitted to a flexural strength test, 3B-P testing, for which the data were interpreted using Weibull statistics. RESULTS: All sintered specimens presented nearly full densification. After the hydrothermal degradation tests, 3Y-TZP samples presented 16.4% of monoclinic (m)-ZrO2 phase while the composite samples withheld 100% of tetragonal (t)-ZrO2 phase. Both materials presented equiaxial ZrO2 grains with an average size of 0.48 ± 0.17 µm and 0.75 ± 0.22 µm, respectively, for the monolithic and composite ceramics. In the composites, is observed the presence of well distributed Al2O3 grains on the ZrO2 matrix, in two distinct morphologies: equiaxial grains and platelets. The composites (Ce,Y)-TZP/Al2O3 presented average values of elastic moduli, Vickers hardness and fracture toughness of 228.3 ± 6.5 GPa, 1427 ± 46 HV e 11.3 ± 0.4 MPa m1/2, respectively. An inversely proportional relationship is observed between the roughness and the bending strength, since the 3Y-TZP samples presented a average strength of 860.7 ± 81 MPa (as-sintered) and 965.4 ± 93 MPa (polished) while the (Ce,Y)-TZP/Al2O3 composites presented average strength of 810.6 ± 147 MPa (as-sintered) and 952.6 ± 88 MPa (polished). CONCLUSIONS: The composites (Ce,Y)-TZP/Al2O3 showed high resistance to degradation in saliva and adequate properties for use as dental implants. Values of flexural strength (>950 MPa) and Weibull modulus (m > 10) were similar to the conventional 3Y-TZP ceramics. Moreover, its hardness, elastic modulus and fracture toughness were higher than those obtained for 3Y-TZP. The expressive values of KIC obtained for (Ce,Y)-TZP/Al2O3 composites are results of association of different toughening mechanisms acting simultaneously in the material.


Dental Implants , Zirconium , Blood Platelets , Ceramics , Dental Materials , Materials Testing , Surface Properties , Yttrium
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