Irradiance effects on the mechanical properties of universal hybrid and flowable hybrid resin composites. |
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Authors: | Annie J St-Georges Edward J Swift Jeffrey Y Thompson Harald O Heymann |
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Affiliation: | Department of Restorative Dentistry, Faculty of Dental Medicine, University of Montreal, C.P. 6128, Succursale Centre-Ville, H3C 3J7, Montreal, Que., Canada. annie.st-georges@umontreal.ca |
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Abstract: | OBJECTIVES: A potential problem with high-intensity lights might be failure of polymer chains to grow and cross-link in a desired fashion, thereby affecting the structure and properties of the polymers formed. The purpose of this study was to evaluate mechanical properties of resin composites polymerized using four different light-curing units. METHODS: A conventional quartz-tungsten-halogen (QTH) light, a soft-start light, an argon-ion laser, and a plasma-arc curing light were used to polymerize disk-shaped (9.0mm diameter x 1.0 mm high) and cylinder-shaped (4mm diameter x 8 mm high) specimens of a universal hybrid and a flowable hybrid composite. Biaxial flexure strength, fracture toughness, hardness, compressive strength, and diametral tensile strength were determined for each composite. RESULTS: The use of the plasma-arc curing light, a high-intensity light, resulted in significantly lower hardness for the universal hybrid composite compared with the hardness obtained using the conventional QTH and the soft-start units. Hardness was the only mechanical property that was adversely affected by the use of a high-intensity light. SIGNIFICANCE: High-intensity lights might affect some resin composite mechanical properties, but this effect cannot be generalized to all resin composites and all properties. |
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