Ceramic bonding to a machined Au-Ti alloy

Quintessence Int. 2007 Nov-Dec;38(10):867-72.

Abstract

Objective: To assess in vitro the bond strength of a machined surface of a Au-Ti alloy to a veneering ceramic.

Method and materials: Metal strips of the alloy Au 1.7-Ti 0.1-Ir were milled from a semiproduct fabricated by continuous casting and cold forming. For comparison, the same alloy as well as a traditional Au-Pt-Pd-In alloy were used in the as-cast state. Six samples of each group were fabricated for the crack initiation test, according to ISO 9693:1999, by preparing appropriate metal strips that were veneered with ceramic using a standard firing procedure. The crack initiation test was performed in a universal testing machine. Load at fracture was recorded. Means of bond strength were calculated for each group and the results compared by use of a 1-sided Student t test (P < .05). Fracture sites were documented by means of SEM.

Results: Bond strength in the 3 groups was in the same order of magnitude. Failure mode was different for both alloys. Failure of the bonding to the Au-Ti alloy predominantly occurred at the alloy-oxide interface, no matter which fabrication process was used. On the Au-Pt-Pd-In alloy, more ceramic residues were observed.

Conclusion: The machined alloy Au 1.7-Ti 0.1-Ir provides sufficient bond strength to veneering ceramics, but this has to be proven by a clinical study.

MeSH terms

  • Dental Alloys*
  • Dental Bonding*
  • Dental Casting Technique
  • Dental Porcelain*
  • Dental Stress Analysis
  • Dental Veneers*
  • Gold Alloys*
  • Materials Testing
  • Metal Ceramic Alloys*

Substances

  • Dental Alloys
  • Gold Alloys
  • Metal Ceramic Alloys
  • gold-titanium alloy
  • Dental Porcelain