The authors and publisher regret that Dr. M.F. Burrow's name was inadvertently omitted from the published article.
The effect of oxalic acid incorporation on the setting time and strength of a glass-ionomer cement
β Scribed by Leon Hugh Prentice; Martin Tyas
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 100 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1742-7061
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Oxalic acid and its metal oxalate salts have been used extensively in dentistry in a range of applications: as desensitisers, in cavity preparation, and as bonding agents. This study investigated the influence of oxalic acid upon the working time, initial setting time, 24-h hardness and compressive strength of a glass-ionomer cement. Conventional glass-ionomer liquids were prepared from polyacrylic acid, tartaric acid, water, and oxalic acid at concentrations of 0-7% w/w. Liquids were dosed into capsules with a commercial glass-ionomer powder, activated and mixed. The resultant pastes were assessed for working time, initial setting time, 24-h hardness and 24-h compressive strength. Liquids containing 0.5-1% oxalic acid lengthened the working time and initial setting time. At concentrations greater than 2%, both working and initial setting times decreased with increasing oxalic acid. Surface hardness values using liquids with 3% and 7% oxalic acid were less hard than the control. Compressive strength was unchanged over the concentrations tested. Oxalic acid may be a useful reaction modifier in glass-ionomer systems. It accelerated the setting reaction without affecting strength, but was limited to low concentrations because of its relatively poor solubility in water.
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