Aging and post-polymerization effects on conversion degree and properties of additive splint materials

The study objective was to analyze dimensional change, flexural strength, surface hardness, wear profile, and conversion degree of different additive splint materials under various postpolymerization conditions of time and artificial aging. Two additive manufacturing systems (Cara Print 4.0, Dima Pr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Authors: Santis, Leandro Ruivo de, Fernandes, Lucas Silveira, Vasques, Mayra Torres, Zambrana, Nataly Rabelo Mina, Viana, Ítallo Emídio Lira, Forlin, Taís Scaramucci, Saavedra, Guilherme de Siqueira Ferreira Anzaloni [UNESP], Francci, Carlos Eduardo
Format: article
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2025
Country:Brasil
Institution:Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
Repository:Repositório Institucional da UNESP
Language:English
OAI Identifier:oai:repositorio.unesp.br:11449/308626
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1807-3107bor-2025.vol39.017
https://hdl.handle.net/11449/308626
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Occlusal Splints
Polymerization
Printing, Three-Dimensional
Description
Summary:The study objective was to analyze dimensional change, flexural strength, surface hardness, wear profile, and conversion degree of different additive splint materials under various postpolymerization conditions of time and artificial aging. Two additive manufacturing systems (Cara Print 4.0, Dima Print Ortho, Kulzer; SprintRay Pro, SprintRay Splint, SprintRay), and a thermally activated resin control (Clássico) were evaluated in artificial aging (deionized water or saliva; 28 or 84 days at 37°C), with recommended or doubled post-polymerization cycles. Dimensional change (surface metrology), flexural strength (ISO 20795–1:2013), fractography (SEM), Knoop hardness, two-body wear profilometry (150,000 cycles; 3mmØ; 20N; 2.1Hz), and conversion degree (FTIR spectroscopy) were assessed. Two-way ANOVA and post-hoc Tukey tests were used for parametric data, and Kruskal-Wallis and post-hoc Dunn tests, for non-parametric data (α = 0.05). Results indicated no statistically significant differences in dimensional change or flexural strength among the materials. Recommended post-polymerization cycles resulted in lower hardness for additive resins than the thermally activated control. Doubling post-polymerization time significantly increased flexural strength and hardness of Dima Print Ortho, but decreased flexural strength of SprintRay Splint, and did not affect wear resistance. Dima Print Ortho demonstrated the highest wear resistance. Artificial aging did not affect flexural strength, surface wear, or dimensional change, but negatively impacted the hardness of all materials except Dima Print Ortho. The conversion degree was unaffected by post-polymerization time, and no significant differences were found among the materials. Overall, additive materials exhibited mechanical and dimensional properties comparable to thermally activated resin, with doubling post-polymerization time positively influencing the properties.