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100

 Creep

Slow permanent deformation of dental materials due to compression by opposite dentition.

100

Strain

how much a material deforms in response to the stress. Amount of change force produced in an object

100

Ultimate strength

after this point, the material breaks down in response to stress.

200

Percolation

gap created due to difference in expansion and contraction rate of dental material and teeth surfaces in response to change in temperature. Fluid seep into these gaps and cause recurrent caries.

200

Stress-strain curve

explain the relation of different dental material on how much stress required to strain a dental material
200

Young's modulus

measures the resistance of a material to deform, stiffness. higher the stiffness = higher modulus = enamel won't deform easily.

dentin lower modulus can deform, brittle

300

Flow

Temporary deformation of dental material in response to pressure or force. i.e fl trays

300

elastic region

where the material will go back to original place and no deformation happen

300

Resilience

energy absorbed by material and withstand stress. if a material is resilient it will withstand stress, absorb energy and come back to original place without being deform. Ability to withstand stress

400

Force

the push, the pull and the twist

400

Plastic region

where material does not go back to its original place and gets deformed.

400

Toughness

how strong/tough the material is by how much energy needed to fracture the material.


500

Stress

when we put force on a dental material it resists that force and in resisting the force it creates an inner stress.

500

Yield point

after this point the dental material starts to permanently deform

500

Fatigue

when repeated stress material eventually break

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