2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.dental.2006.06.022
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Influence of the bonder on the adhesion of porcelain to machined titanium as determined by the strain energy release rate

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Cited by 44 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…4 This explanation is in agreement with other studies using different intermediate layers other than chromium, which also act as oxygen diffusion barriers to improve the adhesion between porcelain and titanium. 6,[17][18][19] The present measurements of the strain energy release rate (G-values) compare favourably with previous results for the adhesion between porcelain and titanium. Suansuwan and Swain reported that utilizing the GoldBonder on CP Ti surfaces increases the bond strength between porcelain and Ti substrate.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…4 This explanation is in agreement with other studies using different intermediate layers other than chromium, which also act as oxygen diffusion barriers to improve the adhesion between porcelain and titanium. 6,[17][18][19] The present measurements of the strain energy release rate (G-values) compare favourably with previous results for the adhesion between porcelain and titanium. Suansuwan and Swain reported that utilizing the GoldBonder on CP Ti surfaces increases the bond strength between porcelain and Ti substrate.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…are subsequently tested under bending conditions [35]. The precise detection of the crack extension along the interface under bending loads is a critical aspect as the displacement control requires highly sensitive strain gauges.…”
Section: Uniaxial and Biaxial Testing Of Multilayersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Porcelain bonding to gold is superior to bonding to all other dental alloys [84]. Several authors [19,[85][86][87] therefore recommend application of a gold-containing paste bonder (AGC® Goldbonder/Kerabond®, Wieland Dental + Technik GmbH & Co. KG, Germany) composed of gold and porcelain particles in an organic solvent, while others recommend a gold sputter coating of the titanium surface [64, 88, 89•, 90]. The results obtained are positive, showing that the gold interlayer can significantly enhance porcelain bonding to titanium with better bonding results than those obtained with the conventional base metal-ceramic systems [85].…”
Section: Processing and Conditioning Concepts For Enhanced Titanium-pmentioning
confidence: 99%