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Wear behaviour of dental enamel at the nanoscale with a sharp and blunt indenter tip

✍ Scribed by G.M. Guidoni; M.V. Swain; I. Jäger


Book ID
104100163
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
980 KB
Volume
266
Category
Article
ISSN
0043-1648

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✦ Synopsis


Two different diamond nanoindenter tips, a rounded conical (∼1200 nm radius) and a sharp cube corner (20-50 nm radius) were used to abrade bovine enamel. Square abraded areas (2 m × 2 m, 5 m × 5 m, 10 m × 10 m) were generated with loads that varied from 50 N to 500 N depending on the indenter tip. In addition normal and lateral forces were simultaneously measured along 10 m single scratched lines with the sharp cube corner tip. SEM (scanning electron microscopy) and TEM (transmission electron microscopy) were also used to characterise the worn areas and debris. Two different wear mechanisms were observed depending on the geometry of the tip. The rounded tip generates a predominantly elastic contact that mainly compresses and plastically deforms the superficial material and generates severe shear deformation within the sub-surface material which, under certain conditions, fractures and removes material from the sample. The sharp tip cuts into and ploughs the enamel creating a wedge or ridge of material ahead of itself which eventually detaches. This sequence is repeated continuously for every passage of the sharp indenter tip. The different mechanisms are discussed in terms of abrading tip contact angle and enamel microstructure.