DocumentCode :
1391849
Title :
Experiment and simulation of resistance of nanoporous dentin biomaterial to CO2 laser irradiation
Author :
Wang, H.Y. ; Lin, S.L. ; Chung, C.K. ; Chuang, S.F.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Nat. Cheng Kung Univ., Tainan, Taiwan
Volume :
5
Issue :
4
fYear :
2011
fDate :
12/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
148
Lastpage :
151
Abstract :
The resistance of nanoporous dentin biomaterial to CO2 laser irradiation was investigated by experiment and simulation for potential tooth hypersensitivity treatment. The controlled parameters including laser power of 0.03-0.150-W, scanning speeds of 11.4-34.2-mm/s and focus/defocus modes were used for studying interaction between laser energy and dentin of human tooth. Most of the dentin specimens were etched after CO2 laser irradiation with the power larger than 0.12 W at a scanning speed of 11.4 mm/s. Compared with the simulation results of temperature distribution, the maximum temperature at laser powers from 0.12 to 0.15 W is increased from 1961 to 2245 C, which exceeded the melting point (1570 C) of dentin s main content hydroxyapatite (HA). Increasing scanning speed can reduce the linear density of laser output energy for just locally melting porous microstructure of dentin surface without etching. Varying focus mode can also improve the damage of nanoporous dentin microstructure. At parameters of 0.150 W power and 34.2 mm/s scanning speed under defocus operation, laser treatment was successfully performed on the nano-HA coated dentin with well-molten sealing on tubules of porous microstructure at a simulate surface temperature of about 574 C, which was the potential for dentin hypersensitivity cure application.
Keywords :
biomedical materials; carbon compounds; dentistry; laser applications in medicine; melting point; nanobiotechnology; nanoporous materials; radiation therapy; dentin hypersensitivity cure application; dentin surface; etching; focus mode; focus-defocus modes; human tooth; hydroxyapatite; laser energy interaction; laser irradiation; laser output energy; laser powers; locally melting porous micro; melting point; nanoporous dentin biomaterial; nanoporous dentin microstructure; porous microstructure; potential tooth hypersensitivity treatment; power 0.03 W to 0.15 W; resistance simulation; temperature 1961 degC to 2245 degC; well-molten sealing;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nanobiotechnology, IET
Publisher :
iet
ISSN :
1751-8741
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1049/iet-nbt.2011.0025
Filename :
6096479
Link To Document :
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