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Investigation of the Damping Capabilities of Different Resin-Based CAD/CAM Restorative Materials.

Thomas NiemStefan GonschorekBernd Wöstmann
Published in: Polymers (2022)
The aim of the present study was to evaluate and quantify the damping properties of common resin-based computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) restorative materials (CRMs) and assess their energy dissipation abilities. Leeb hardness ( HLD ), together with its deduced energy dissipation data ( HLD dis ), and loss tangent values recorded via dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) were determined for six polymer, four composite, and one ceramic CRM as well as one metal. Data were statistically analyzed. Among resin-based CRMs, the significantly highest HLD dis data were detected for the fiber-reinforced composite FD ( p < 0.001) directly followed by the filler-reinforced Ambarino High Class ( p < 0.001). The significantly lowest HLD dis values were observed for the polymer-based CRM Telio CAD ( p < 0.001). For loss tangent, both PEEK materials showed the significantly lowest data and the polymer-based M-PM the highest results with all composite CRMs in between. HLD dis data, which simultaneously record the energy dissipation mechanism of plastic material deformation, more precisely characterize the damping behavior of resin-based CRMs compared to loss tangent results that merely describe viscoelastic material behavior. Depending on material composition, resin-based CRMs reveal extremely different ratios of viscoelastic damping but frequently show enhanced HLD dis values because of plastic material deformation. Future developments in CAD/CAM restorative technology should focus on developing improved viscoelastic damping effects.
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