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1. Scanner
2. Software for designing
3. Processing Machine (milling or addition)
Scanning of the dental cast
Components of CAD-CAM
All CAD/CAM systems have three main components
1. Scanner that transforms geometry (shape and dimensions)
and converts it to digital data to be processed by the computer
A) Optical scanner: scans the prepared tooth or the
die with laser or white light
Press ring
Cylindrical Crucible Former Press plunger/ Pushing rod
3.
1. High Opacity (HO)
AHMED HAMARSHA
Study Resources
⚫ Started with the platinum foil technique (developed over 100 years ago). The platinum
foil supported the porcelain during firing and prevented distortion. Then it is removed
prior cementation.
⚫ Nowadays, with the rise of new materials (i.e. Zirconia and Lithium disilicate); hot-
pressing, slip-casting and milling (using CAD/CAM) are the most popular fabrication
techniques.
⚫ All-ceramic restorations may be fabricated in several ways.
All-ceramic Systems
⚫ They advised using aluminous porcelain (aluminum oxide (alumina), which is composed
of crystals dispersed in a glassy matrix due to the fact that alumina has high fracture
toughness and hardness. The technique involved:
1. An opaque inner core containing 50% by weight alumina for high strength.
2. Veneering material with matching thermal expansion. It consisted a combination of
esthetic body and enamel porcelains with 15% and 5% crystalline alumina.
⚫ The final restorations were approximately 40% stronger than those fabricated with
traditional feldspathic porcelain.
All-ceramic Systems
⚫ Later on, high-strength core frameworks for all-ceramic restorations were produced with a
slip-casting procedure/technique, i.e. VITA In-Ceram.
⚫ In this technique, the slip is an aqueous suspension of fine ceramic particles in water with
dispersing agents.
⚫ The porous refractory die absorbs the water from the applied slip which leads to the
condensation of the slip on the die.
⚫ The refractory die is then fired at a high temperature (1150°C) and shrinks more than the
condensed slip; allowing easy separation after firing. The fired porous core is then glass
infiltrated, a unique process in which molten glass is drawn into the pores by capillary
action at a high temperature.
All-ceramic Systems
⚫ Restorations processed by slip-casting technique tend to exhibit lower porosity and fewer
processing defects than do traditionally sintered ceramic materials.
⚫ In-Ceram is about three to four times stronger the earlier alumina core materials.
⚫ In-ceram reported good marginal fit. However, being technique sensitive and the need
for a skilled dental technician, limited its popularity and also created poor marginal fit
sometimes.
Pressable Ceramics
Pressable ceramics
⚫ Ceramics which are pressed under pressure and heat into a mold to make an all-ceramic
dental restoration.
⚫ Under a certain heat and pressure, a piston (Plunger) is used to force a heated ceramic
ingot through a heated tube into the designated mold. Then, the ceramic form cools and
hardens to the shape of the mold.
⚫ lost-wax technique is used to create a mould of the restoration into which ceramic is
pressed at high temperatures and pressure.
⚫ Pressable ceramics come in prefabricated ingots made of crystalline particles distributed
throughout a glassy matrix to produce a well-controlled and homogeneous material.
Pressable Ceramics
⚫ Heat-Pressed Ceramics
⚫ Leucite Based
⚫ In this technique, ceramic ingots are pressed at a high temperature (≈1165°C) into a
refractory mold made by the lost-wax technique.
⚫ The ceramic ingots are available in different shades.
⚫ The two techniques lead to comparable mean flexural strength values for the resulting
porcelain composite.
Pressable Ceramics
⚫ In the veneering technique; the CTE of the core material is usually lower than that for the
staining technique; to be compatible with the CTE of the veneering porcelain.
⚫ They were not indicated for FDP
⚫ Indicated for:
1. Thin Veneers
2. Inlays & Onlays
3. Crowns in the anterior and posterior region
4. 3-unit bridges in the anterior region
5. 3-unit bridges in the premolar region up to the second premolar
6. Implant superstructures for single-tooth restorations (anterior and posterior regions)
7. Implant superstructures for 3-unit bridges up to the second premolar
8. Primary telescopic crowns
Pressable Ceramics
⚫ Contraindicated for:
1. Posterior bridges reaching into the molar region
2. 4- and more-unit bridges
3. Inlay-retained bridges
4. Deep sub-gingival preparations
5. Patients with substantially reduced residual dentition
6. Bruxism
7. Cantilever bridge
8. Maryland bridges
9. Layer thicknesses below 1 mm
10. Preparations with sharp edges
11. Preparations that do not provide anatomical support and with irregular layering
thicknesses
Thank you
Ceramic Inlay/Onlay
Lecturer : Ahmed Hamarsha
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