Abrasive & Polishing Agents
Abrasive & Polishing Agents
Abrasive & Polishing Agents
Introduction
It is imperative that all dental appliances and restorations be smooth to the maximum. Absense of the smooth surface leads to
1. 2.
Rough surfaces are not only discomfortable but may also leads to constant irritation to the Oral mucosa. Plaque/ food deposition will lead to tarnish and corrosion of the metallic restoration, nidas for microbial flora, secondary caries and periodontal deterioration.
Hence both dental surgeon and dental technician must know the science of dental abrasives and polishers. The knowledge includes. 1. 2. 3. 4. Various abrasives and polishing agents Availability of the same Method of using the same Mechanism of the abrasion, wear and tear and polishing.
The difference between an abrasive agent and polishing agent is some what difficult to define agent having large particle size may acts as an abrasive, 1
producing scratches. The same abrasive with smaller particles size may be used as polishing agent.
Abrasion : The wearing away of the substance or structure through some unusual or abnormal or abnormal mechanical process.
Abrasives are rough gritty and wear producing particles. abrasion is a substance which is used to remove excess material by cutting. Substances used to wear off or grind objects in order to give then the desired size, shape or finish.
Attrition: Attrition may be defined as the physiologic wearing away of a tooth as a result of tooth to tooth contact, as in mastication. This occurs on occlusal incisal and proximal surfaces of the teeth. This process is physiologic rather than pathologic.
Erosion is defined as a loss of tooth substances by a chemical process that does not involve known bacterial action.
Grinding is the gross reduction to the surface of the subtrate by the process of abrasion. It is usually performed with large particle sized abrasives.
Polishing: Polishing is the process of making a rough surface smooth to the touch and glossy. Polishing is usually performed with small sized particles. (Submicron sized abrasives). 2
Abrasives: The material that causes the wear or abrasion of another material.
Substrates: The material being abraded is called substrate, while tooth preparation. Diamond will cut the tooth, and tooth is called substrate and the diamond is called Abrasive. While polishing denture, denture is called substrate and pumice or french chalk is called abrasive.
Wear: Wear is common phenomenon is dentistry that occurs when two surfaces undergo slipping or sliding movements as a load is applied. Wear is defined as progressive loss of substance from the surface of a body brought about by mechanical action.
Mechanical causes that can cause wear include rubbing impact scapping and erosion, which may result in the progressive removal of a substance from the surface of the material that is undergoing wear. The types of wear 1. 2. 3. 4. Adhesive wear Abrasive wear Erosive wear Surface fatigue wear
Mechanism of action
Abrasion occurs when a hard rough surface slides along a soften surface and cut or plows a series of grooves. It may be either two body process or three 3
body process. An example of three body process would be the action of pumice as it is applied to tooth enamel by rubber cup during oral prophylaxis procedure. An example of two body process is when the diamond bur is used to cut tooth enamel.
The action of an abrasive is essentially a cutting action. Abrasive tools or slurries however differ from dental cutting instruments in that the cutting edge or a point of the abrasive are not arranged in any particular pattern. Each point or edge of an abrasive acts as an individual cutting blade. The process of abrasion is affected by the physical and mechanical properties of the material being abraded.
The surface of the work is penetrated by the abrasive and material is removed by a process of shear, in the from of plastically deformed chips. In case of polishing crystalline form will change into amorphous form and polished layer is called Beilby layer. Melting point is important. The solid with high melting point polishes, the one with lower melting point, even if it is not hard.
Carbide burs were introduced in 1947. Now mainly used for tooth preparation.
Steel burs are now-a-days used for finishing procedures. Carbides are superior at higher speed. Carbide bur head is made up of tungsten carbide particle held together by a matrix of cobalt and nickel. Carbide is stiffer and stronger than steel but more brittle (hence sudden blow or shock will lead to the fracture of the carbide bur).
Both steel and carbide are available in different shape (shape of the head means general contour or silhouette of the head).
Common shapes are round, inverted cone, straight fissure and taper fissure.
Stainless steel
contains carbon, manganese, silicon - contains carbon, chrome and iron and iron - cutting edge is lost earlier than the harder than stainless steel but rusts carbon steel and corrodes
Usually cutting edge is made up of carbon steel, carbon steel or stainless steel are subjected to heat treatment by the manufacturer. a. Hardening heat treatment, hardens the alloy and makes it brittle. b. Tempering heat treatment relieves the strain and increase the toughness. Cutting: Cutting is generally understood to mean the removal of a part of structure surface by means of shearing action. The difference between industrial cutting and dental cutting is the method of applying the cutting tool. In metal work the work is usually carried or fed to the tool at a constant rate, whereas dentist carries the tool to the work.
Dental burs: Dental burs are miniature milling cutters as used in industry. Many shape and sizes are available in dentistry for various purposes.
a.
b.
Rake angle: The rake angle is the angle that the faces of the bur tooth makes with the radial line from the centre of the bur to the blade. The angle can be negative if the blade is beyond or leading the radial line (referring to
the direction of rotation). It can be o if the radial line and the tooth face coincide with each other (radial rake angle).
c. The angle can be positive if radial line leads the face so that the rake angle is on the inside of the radial line.
d.
e.
Clearance angle: The angle between the back of the tooth and the work.
If the land is present on the bur, the clearance angle is divided into primary clearance which is the angle the land will make the work and secondary clearance, which is the angle between the back of the bur tooth and work. When the back surface of the tooth is curved, the clearance angle is called radial clearance.
f.
Tooth angle: This is measured between the face and the back. If a land is present, it is measured between the face and the land.
g.
Flute or chip space: The space between successive teeth. The number of teeth in dental cutting bur is 6-8.
Head: the portion carrying cutting blades. Shank: The portions connecting the head to the attachment part. 7
3.
engaged within the hand piece. Factor affecting the rate of abrasion
1. A large difference in harness between the abrasive and substrate allows the most efficient grinding to take place.
Tests are Brinell, Rockwell, Wickers and Knoop, surface hardness of the diamond is more than other materials, so it is most commonly used in dentistry as abrasive.
Knoop harness numbers of abrasives Abrasive Sand Emery Silicon carbide Boron carbide Diamond Number (KHN) 800 2000 2500 2800 7000
Brinell and Knoop hardness values are function of materials resistance to indentation whereas mohs value indicate the resistance to scratching of one material by another.
2. The particle size of an abrasive: Larger abrasive particles will abrade a surface more rapidly than will smaller particles, however they tends to leave coarser scratches in the abraded surfaces than do fine particles.
The particle size of an abrasive may be expressed in micrometers. By convention, parties are classified as fine (0-10um), medium 10-100um) and coarse (100-500um) according to the average particles size of the sample.
3. The particles shape also has an effect on the rate of abrasion. Sharp irregularly shaped particles will abrade a surface more rapidly than will more rounded particles having duller cutting angle.
4. The greater the speed which the abrasive travels across the surfaces being abraded the greater the rate of abrasion. The greater friction at higher speeds, however tends to create higher temperatures at the surface of the substrate.
5. The greater the pressure applied, the more rapid will be the abrasion for a given abrasive. Greater pressure produces deeper and wider scratches and creates higher temperature.
6. Lubricants: (e.g., silicon grease, water spray or glycerol) are used during abrasion for two purpose to reduce heat build up and to wash away debris to prevent clogging of the abrasive instrument.
Impact strength: It is the energy required to fracture a material under an impact force.
4. Shape of the abrasive: It should be with irregular shape with sharp edges. Particles of bigger size and cutting edges make deeper groove and abrade quickly. Edges must be sharper.
5. Rate of movement of abrasive increases rate of abrasion only upto a certain speed.
7. Brittle surface can be abraded more quickly. During abrasion or polishing generation of heat is to be minimized by spraying water. In some cases excessive heat cause stress relief and distortion.
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Abrasion Resistance: abrasion resistance is the ability of a material to resist wearing of the surface when it is rubbed across the surface of another material.
Abrasion resistance depends upon following factors. 1. Surface hardness of the material. 2. Temperature of the surface layer (AR decreases with increase in temperature). 3. Frictional force. 4. Rate and amount of slip. 5. Thermal conductivity of the material Hardness is related to some extent to abrasion resistance. Diamond is the hardest of material and has got greater abrasion resistance. Hardness is not only a factor in selecting abrasives, because steel is more harder than rubber but has much lower abrasion Resistance. An understanding of A.R. is possible only from a knowledge of mechanism of abrasion.
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