Adhesion/Luting and Metals Flashcards

1
Q

Retention is achieved by what?

A
  • Friction
  • Adhesive joint
  • The cement
  • The restoration
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2
Q

What 4 things do some bonding agents contain?

A

1-Nanofiller
2-Fluoride
3-Antimicrobial ingredients
4-Desensitizers

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3
Q

How are luting materials classified?

A

-length of time the are expected to function(Provisional: easier/more temporary
Definitive: Function longest possible time)
-setting mechanism (acid based or polymerization)

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4
Q

What is the main challenge in bonding to dentin or enamel?

A

maintaining moisture without being to wet or too dry

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5
Q

What do all amalgams contain?

A

mercury

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6
Q

What are the primary components of amalgam alloys?

A
  • Silver
  • Tin
  • Copper
  • Indium, zinc, platinum, palladium (lesser amounts)
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7
Q

What role does zinc play in amalgams?

A

scavenge metal oxides (can cause delayed expansion if water saliva or blood contact the amalgam)

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8
Q

What are the phases of amalgam from strongest to weakest?

A

y(Ag3Sn) > y1(Ag2Hg3) > y2(Sn7-8Hg) > voids

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9
Q

How does Copper make the amalgam stronger?

A

Forms Cu3Sn and keeps gamma 2 (Sn7Hg) phase from forming

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10
Q

What are the 3 kinds of amalgam?

A

1-Lathe-cut
2-Spherical
3-Admixed

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11
Q

What three techniques are used to manufacture indirect restorations?

A

1-Casting
2-Milling
3-Ceramming

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12
Q

What are the 4 most common base metal alloys for RPD and FPD?

A

1-Nickel-chromium (PD, Porcelain, crowns/bridges)
2-Cobalt-chromium (PD, porcelain)
3-Titanium (PD, crown/bridge, implant)
4-Wrought stainless steel (endo instrument, ortho wire, crowns)

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13
Q

What are 5 things to look for in a dental alloy?

A
1-Non-toxic
2-resistance to corrosion
3-phys and mech properties
4-ease of use
5-expense
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14
Q

What does chromium help with?

A

Resist tarnish

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15
Q

What does Molybdenum help with?

A

increase strength

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16
Q

What does aluminum help with?

A

Forms Ni3Al to increase tensile and yield strength

17
Q

What does beryllium help with?

A

lowers fusion range, adversely affects ductility and corrosion resistance

18
Q

What does silicon and manganese help with?

A

fluidity and castability

19
Q

What are the main advantages of using noble metals?

A

Resist oxidation, tarnish and corrosion during formation process and in the mouth

20
Q

Though palladium is used frequently what is a possible disadvantage?

A

absorbs H2 gas changing conductibility and making it difficult to cast

21
Q

What are iridium, ruthenium and rhodium used for?

A

grain refiners because of high melting points (nucleating centers)

22
Q

What does tin do in alloys?

A

increases hardness and brittleness

23
Q

What does gallium do in alloys?

A

creates oxides necessary for porcelain bonding to alloys

24
Q

What is the old ADA classification for metals?

A
  • Type I: inlays subject to slight stress
  • Type II: most cast inlays
  • Type III: crowns, bridge abutments, precision inlays
  • Type IV: Cast RPD w/ Clasps, precision bridge
25
Q

What is the new ADA classification for metals?

A

1-High noble: noble metal >60% wt, or gold content >40%
2-Noble metal if >25%
3-Predominantly base metal if

26
Q

What are the properties of Ni-Cr for crown/bridge?

A
  • high hardness and elastic modulus
  • difficult to cast
  • high solidification shrinkage
  • toxic vapor/dust
  • nickel is an allergen
27
Q

What are the properties of Co-Cr for crown/bridge?

A
  • better corrosion resistance
  • higher temperature needed for casting
  • difficult to clean