Fatigue testing of two porcelain-zirconia all-ceramic crown systems

Dent Mater. 2009 Sep;25(9):1122-7. doi: 10.1016/j.dental.2009.03.009. Epub 2009 Apr 22.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the mouth-motion step-stress fatigue behavior of two porcelain-zirconia all-ceramic crown systems.

Methods: The average dimensions of a mandibular first molar crown were imported into CAD software; a tooth preparation was modeled by reducing proximal walls by 1.5 mm and occlusal surface by 2.0 mm. The CAD-based tooth preparation was made by rapid prototyping and used as a master die to fabricate all-ceramic crowns with 1.0 mm porcelain veneered on 0.5 mm Y-TZP cores (LAVA veneer+LAVA frame, 3M/ESPE, and Vita veneer+CERCON frame, Dentsply). Crowns were cemented on aged (60 days in water) composite (Z100, 3M/ESPE) reproductions of the die. Three crowns from the LAVA group were subjected to single cycle load to failure for stress profile design; remainder subjected to step-stress mouth-motion fatigue (three step-stress profiles). All mechanical testing was performed by sliding a WC indenter of 6.25 mm diameter 0.7 mm lingually down the mesio-distal cusp. Master Weibull curves and reliability for missions of 50,000 cycles at 200 N load were calculated (Alta Pro 7, Reliasoft).

Results: Single load to failure showed fractures through the zirconia core. Reliability for a 200 N x 50K cycle mission was not significantly different between systems. In fatigue, failure occurred by formation of large chips within the veneer originating from the contact area without core exposure.

Conclusions: LAVA and CERCON ceramic systems present similar fatigue behavior; fatigue loading of both systems reproduces clinically observed failure modes.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Bite Force
  • Computer-Aided Design
  • Crowns*
  • Dental Porcelain*
  • Dental Prosthesis Design
  • Dental Stress Analysis*
  • Dental Veneers
  • Humans
  • Materials Testing
  • Molar
  • Survival Analysis
  • Yttrium*
  • Zirconium*

Substances

  • yttria stabilized tetragonal zirconia
  • Dental Porcelain
  • Yttrium
  • Zirconium