Application of mercury intrusion porosimetry for studying the porosity of mineral trioxide aggregate at two different pH

Authors

  • Mohammad Ali Saghiri Department of Dental Material, Dental School, Azad University (Dental Branch), Tehran, Iran
  • Kamal Asgar Department of Dental and Biological Materials, University of Michigan, Michigan, USA
  • Mehrdad Lotfi Research Center for Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology and Department of Endodontics, Dental Faculty, Tabriz University (Medical Sciences), Tabriz, Iran
  • Kasra Karamifar Department of Endodontics, Dental School, Azad University (Dental Branch), Tehran, Iran
  • Prasanna Neelakantan Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics, Saveetha Dental College, Saveetha University, Chennai, India
  • John L. Ricci Department of Biomaterials and Biomimetics, New York University College of Dentistry, New York, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/00016357.2011.597777

Keywords:

leakage, mineral trioxide aggregate, mercury intrusion porosimetry, porosity

Abstract

Objective. To evaluate a novel method of detecting and comparing the porosity of white Mineral Trioxide Aggregate and Portland cement at two different pH. Materials and methods. Cylindrical specimens (n = 120) were prepared from hydrated ordinary white Portland Cement (WPC) (n = 60) and white Mineral Trioxide Aggregate (WMTA) (n = 60) and exposed to environments with pH of 4.4 (n = 30) or 7.4 (n = 30). The pore size distribution and total pore volume were detected using Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry. Data were analyzed by analysis of variance and post-hoc Tukey or Tamhane test (p = 0.05). Results. The pore volume of WMTA was significantly lesser than WPC at both pH (p < 0.05). The surface tension of mercury was taken as 480 (N/m) and the contact angle 141.3° for both materials. Pores were consistently found in all specimens. Total pore volumes for WPC and WMTA (cubic centimeter/gram) were 0.1954 and 0.1023, respectively, while the diameter of the pores ranged from 50–100 Å and 20–50 Å, respectively. Conclusions. Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry technique is a promising and reliable technique for assessing the porosity of endodontic materials.

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Published

2012-01-01