Abstract

Objectives This in vitro comparative study evaluated the effect of different stone mixing methods on material properties of four dental stones. Two ADA type IV stones (Silky-Rock and Snap-Stone), one type V high expansion stone (Die Keen), and one recently introduced type V specialty stone (HandiMix) were chosen for this study. Methods Forty cylindrical specimens (25 mm × 12.5 mm) were cast for each of the nine stone sub-groups and bench dried at 23 ± 2 °C for 1 and 24 h. Specimens were then tested in an Instron in tensile and compression modes at crosshead speeds of 0.5 and 1.0 mm/min, respectively. Four rectangular-shaped specimens (30 mm × 15 mm × 15 mm) of each stone type were cast and bench dried for 48 h. Knoop microhardness measurements were obtained from defined areas on each specimen for surface hardness testing using 200 g load and 20 s dwell time. A 12.6 mm 2 area was then delimited in the center of two sides of each specimen and photographed under low power magnification (40×). The average pore number per area was then determined for each specimen for surface porosity testing. The setting time and setting expansion for each stone type was recorded as well. Results ANOVA ( P < 0.001) and Ryan–Einot–Gabriel–Welsh test ( P < 0.05) showed significant differences between diametral tensile strengths and pore numbers for both stone types and mixing methods. Conclusion Within the limitations of this study, the newly introduced mixing method did not appear to have an effect on the physical properties of HandiMix stone.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call