Dental Materials
Volume 22, Issue 8 , Pages 785-791, August 2006

A new kinetic model for the photopolymerization shrinkage-strain of dental composites and resin-monomers

  • Mohammad Atai

      Affiliations

    • Iran Polymer and Petrochemical Institute (IPPI), P.O. Box 14965/115, Tehran, Iran
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +9821 44580085; fax: +9821 44580023.
  • ,
  • David C. Watts

      Affiliations

    • Biomaterials Science Research Group, School of Dentistry and Photon Science Institute, The University of Manchester, Manchester M15 6FH, UK

Received 17 January 2006; received in revised form 25 January 2006; accepted 1 February 2006.

Abstract 

Objectives

The aim of the study was to develop a new kinetic model for the shrinkage-strain rates of dental resin composites. The effect of filler content on the shrinkage-strain kinetics and degree of conversion of dental composites was also investigated.

Methods

A resin matrix containing 65wt.% Bis-GMA and 35wt.% TEGDMA was prepared. 0.5wt.% camphorquinone and 0.5wt.% dimethyl aminoethyl methacrylate were dissolved in the resin as photo-initiator system. Silanized glass fillers were added in different percentages to the resin-monomers. The shrinkage-strain of the specimens photopolymerized at circa 550mW/cm2 was measured using the bonded-disc technique at 23, 37 and 45°C for the matrix monomers and 23°C for the composites. Initial shrinkage-strain rates were obtained by numerical differentiation of shrinkage-strain data with respect to time. Degree-of-conversion of the composites containing different filler contents was measured using FTIR spectroscopy.

Results

A new kinetic model was developed for the shrinkage-strain rate using the autocatalytic model of Kamal [Kamal MR, Sourour S. Kinetic and thermal characterization of thermoset cure. Polym Eng Sci 1973;13(1):59–64], which is used to describe the reaction kinetics of thermoset resins. The model predictions were in good agreement with the experimental data. The results also showed a linear correlation between the shrinkage-strain (and shrinkage-strain rate) and filler-volume fraction. The filler fraction did not affect the degree-of-conversion of the composites.

Significance

The rate of polymerization, determined via the shrinkage, being invariant with filler-fraction, suggests that only a relatively high filler-surface area, as may be obtained with nano-fillers, will affect the network-forming kinetics of the resin matrix.

Keywords: Dental composites, Photopolymerization, Shrinkage, Kinetics, Kinetic model, Filler

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PII: S0109-5641(06)00048-0

doi:10.1016/j.dental.2006.02.009

Dental Materials
Volume 22, Issue 8 , Pages 785-791, August 2006