Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine the surface energy parameters of dental self-adhesive resin cements (SRCs) and to measure their bond strength to dentin. Six dental SRCs (RelyX Unicem Clicker, RU; Maxcem Elite, ME; BisCem, BC; Clearfil SA Luting, SA; Multilink Speed, MS; seT PP, SP) and one resin-modified glass ionomer cement (RelyX Luting 2, RL; control) were tested. Smear layer-covered bovine dentin was used as bonding substrate. Using the dynamic sessile drop method, surface energy, surface energy components, degree of hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity (expressed as ΔG sws using thermodynamic notation), and apparent surface energies for each material were calculated. The luting cements were bonded to the dentin and stored in water at 37 °C for 24 h prior to shear bond strength test (n = 10). Pearson correlation analysis was applied to detect possible correlations between surface energy parameters and measured shear bond strength (α = 0.05). RU, SA, and MS produced negative ΔG sws values (hydrophobic), whereas ME, BC, SP, and RL yielded positive ones (hydrophilic). RU had the highest value among all six SRCs tested, the value for MS being statistically equivalent (p = 0.785). The base component, ΔG sws, and surface energy determined with water showed significant negative linear correlations with dentin bond strength (r/p = −0.801/0.030, −0.900/0.006, and −0.892/0.007, respectively). These results suggest that bonding to smear layer-covered bovine dentin was governed by the base component and the hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity of the SRCs.

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