Measure of the hygroscopic expansion of human dentin

Authors: Hakim Gharbi (LMS), Wang Wenlong (LMS, LMPS), Chloé Giraudet (M3DISIM), Jean-Marc Allain (M3DISIM), Elsa Vennat (LMPS, URB2i)

arXiv: 2211.12273v1 - DOI (physics.med-ph)

Abstract: Background: Direct dental restoration implies a drying of the dentin substrate. This drying may induce significant strain in the dentin, affecting the bonding efficiency of the restoration. Objective: We measure the dilatation of dentine under changes of relative humidity as well as the impact of humidity on dentin elastic properties. This investigates the role of relative humidity variation during dental surgery on restoration lifetime. Methods: We have coupled an environmental chamber to control both temperature and humidity on the sample, with an optical microscope to measure precisely the strain on the sample surface, after a quantification of the measurement noise. This set-up is used on carefully prepared samples placed on a compression device to measure the elastic parameters. Results: Dentin dilates when the relative humidity increases, with a coefficient of hygroscopic expansion of typically 6.10-3 %.(%RH)-1. This dilatation occurs in about ten minutes. Young modulus and Poisson's ratio are not modified by the variation of relative humidity. Conclusions: Hygroscopic expansion is an order of magnitude larger than thermal expansion during dental surgery: around 0.3% with respect to 0.03%. These levels are low with respect to dental rupture, but may induce a significant decrease of the life-expectancy of a restoration.

Submitted to arXiv on 22 Nov. 2022

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