The interaction of three polyacid-modified composite resins (compomers) with various acidic storage solutions, and also water, over periods of time up to 6 months has been studied and compared with those of a glass-ionomer and a composite resin. This interaction has been shown to vary in a complex way with length of storage and nature of the acid, and citric acid was found to be the most aggressive storage medium for glass-ionomer cement, and also for the compomers. The pure composite resin, by contrast, was relatively unaffected by all of the acid solutions examined. In all acids, the compomers showed a distinct buffering effect, i.e. they increased the pH towards neutral, as did the glass-ionomer. The extent of this also varied with duration of storage and nature of the acid. The biaxial flexure strength was determined and found to be essentially unaffected by the complex chemical interactions with acidic storage solutions. Values obtained for the compomers were lower than those of the composite resin, but above those of the glass-ionomer. Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy was employed to study the changes in the compomers following storage in the aqueous media, but bands were broad and no detailed assignments could be made. There were changes in the region of the spectra associated with metal carboxylates however, and this indicates that the secondary acid-base reaction had occurred following water uptake.
The properties of a polyacid-modified composite resin and two resin-modified luting cements have been studied. The polyacid-modified composite resin had the slowest setting reaction and, in this respect, it did not conform to the current international standard for luting cements. The compressive strength of all of the materials was studied after varying periods of storage from 24 h to 1 year. The polyacid-modified composite resin showed a distinct dip in strength at 1 month in all of the storage media, but otherwise it showed no significant variation with either age or storage medium. The resin-modified glass-ionomers showed variation at 24 h with storage medium (deionized water, 0.9% NaCl or 20 mmol dm(-3) lactic acid), but thereafter they showed little variation, until 1 year, when Vitremer luting showed a significant decline in strength in pure water. However, at 24 h and when stored in water, all of the materials had strengths that easily exceeded the minimum requirement of the current standard (70 MPa). They all took up water on storage, with diffusion coefficients ranging from 1.32 to 17. 19x10(-7) cm2 s(-1). These values were found to depend on whether the specimens were stored in pure water or in physiological saline. However, equilibrium water contents varied only slightly between water and saline. The polyacid-modified composite resin, Dyract-Cem, took up the least water, as well as showing the smallest variation in strength with age. By contrast, it was more difficult to mix than the other materials and the high viscosity of the paste led to the formation of voids and other imperfections in the specimens.
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