ISSN 0862-5468 (Print), ISSN 1804-5847 (online) 

Ceramics-Silikáty 64, (1) 1 - 6 (2020)


THE EFFECT OF HEAT TREATMENT OF AN IONOMER GLASS ON ITS SURFACE CHARACTERISTICS AND CEMENT-FORMING PROPERTIES
 
Klos Jacek 1, Wawrzynczak Agata 1, Nicholson John W. 2, Nowak Izabela 1, Czarnecka Beata 3
 
1 Chemistry Department, Adam Mickiewicz University, Chemistry Department, Adam Mickiewicz University, ul. Uniwersytetu Poznanskiego 8, 61-614 Poznan, Poland
2 Dental Materials Unit, Bart's and the London Institute of Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, UK and Bluefield Centre for Biomaterials, 67-68 Hatton Garden, London EC1N 8JY, UK
3 Department of Biomaterials and Experimental Dentistry, University of Medical Sciences, ul. Bukowska 70, 60-812 Poznan, Poland

Keywords: Ionomer glass, Specific surface area, Density, Thermo-gravimetric analysis, Water-loss
 

The surface properties of G338 ionomer glass powder, both in as-received and heat-treated, have been studied in order to identify the reason that heat-treatment gives a cement that sets quicker but is weaker. Samples of G338 glass were analysed by X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy and the density determined by gas pycnometry. As-received and heat-treated (at 240 °C) glass powders were examined by Scanning Electron Microscopy. Specific surface area (BET) and pore volume were determined with low temperature nitrogen sorption, using eight individual powder samples. Thermo-gravimetric analysis was carried out on as-received G338 in the range 30-900 °C ramped at 10 °C/min in an inert atmosphere. Results showed the appearance of the as-received and heat-treated G338 powders to be the same, as were the specific surface areas and pore volumes. The density was found to be 2.6438 (±0.0093) g/cm³ and the XRF results were consistent with the known composition of the glass. Thermo-gravimetric analysis showed that the glass powder lost mass four steps, which were attributed to variations in states of water-binding on the surface of the glass. These findings lead to the conclusion that the observed differences in the setting properties of the glass G338 with poly(acrylic acid) and the strength of the resulting cements are not due to physical differences between the powders but to variations in the amount and state of surface water. Specifically, these variations are between differences in water binding to silanol groups that occur on glass surfaces.


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doi: 10.13168/cs.2019.0042
 
 
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