Evaluation of Mechanical Properties of Self-cured, Heat-cured, and Photosensitive 3D Printing Resins After the Addition of Silica Nanoparticles

  • Cristiane Maria Boniatti Mussatto
  • Elisa Magno Nunes de Oliveira
  • Karthikeyan Subramani
  • Eduardo Gonçalves Mota
  • Ricardo Meurer Papaléo
Keywords: PMMA; Silica nanoparticles; CAD/CAM; 3D print.

Abstract

This study evaluated investigate the addition of silica nanoparticles in autopolymerizable resin and into liquid resin for 3D printing and compare them with CAD-CAM blocks and thermopolymerizable resin, regarding flexural strength and surface roughness. Eight groups (n=12) were created according to the types of materials: autopolymerizable resin (G1-G4), photosensitive resin for 3D printing (G5-G6), PMMA block (G7) and thermopolymerizable resin (G8). Functionalized silica nanoparticles (0.5-1.5 wt%) were added in groups G2-G4 and G6. Mechanical flexural strength, surface roughness and morphological analysis were carried out to evaluate the properties of the samples. One-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey's post-hoc test, was used to evaluate the data. The average surface roughness was higher in group G7 and lower in the G8 group, with a statistical difference (p < 0.001). The G8 and G1-G4 showed no significant difference in surface roughness. The G5 and G6 presented surface roughness higher than that recommended by Borchers and Bollen (Ra=0.2 µm). The incorporation of nanoparticles into self-polymerizing acrylic resins negatively affected the mechanical properties of the material, reducing flexural strength. The G5 and G6 demonstrated the lowest flexural strength (p<0.001), presenting values lower than those recommended by ISO (σ >60 MPa) regardless of the incorporation or not of silica nanoparticles. The G7 presented the highest flexural strength value followed by the G8. Within the limits of this study, it may be concluded that the addition of silica nanoparticles did not improve the flexural strength the G6 and also affected negatively the mechanical properties of self-polymerizing acrylic resins.

Published
2024-06-30
Section
Articles