Effects of extreme cooling methods on mechanical properties and shear bond strength of bilayered porcelain/3Y-TZP specimens Antonio A. Almeida-Júnior a, Diogo Longhini a, Natália B. Domingues a, Claudinei Santos b, Gelson L. Adabo a,* aUNESP – Univ Estadual Paulista, Faculdade de Odontologia de Araraquara, R. Humaitá, 1680 Sala 415, Centro. Araraquara, SP 14801-903, Brazil bUniversidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro – Faculdade de Tecnologia de Resende, Etr Resende-Riachuelo, S/N, Morada da Colina, Resende, RJ 27523-000, Brazil j o u r n a l o f d e n t i s t r y 4 1 ( 2 0 1 3 ) 3 5 6 – 3 6 2 a r t i c l e i n f o Article history: Received 6 November 2012 Received in revised form 9 January 2013 Accepted 11 January 2013 Keywords: Dental ceramic Zirconia Bilayer ceramic Cooling Residual stress a b s t r a c t Objectives: This study investigated the effect of extreme cooling methods on the flexural strength, reliability and shear bond strength of veneer porcelain for zirconia. Methods: Vita VM9 porcelain was sintered on zirconia bar specimens and cooled by one of the following methods: inside a switched-off furnace (slow), at room temperature (normal) or immediately by compressed air (fast). Three-point flexural strength tests (FS) were performed on specimens with porcelain under tension (PT, n = 30) and zirconia under tension (ZT, n = 30). Shear bond strength tests (SBS, n = 15) were performed on cylindrical blocks of porcelain, which were applied on zirconia plates. Data were submitted to one-way ANOVA and Tukey’s post hoc tests ( p < 0.05). Weibull analysis was performed on the PT and ZT configurations. Results: One-way ANOVA for the PT configuration was significant, and Tukey’s test revealed that fast cooling leads to significantly higher values ( p < 0.01) than the other cooling methods. One-way ANOVA for the ZT configuration was not significant ( p = 0.06). Weibull analysis showed that normal cooling had slightly higher reliability for both the PT and ZT configurations. Statistical tests showed that slow cooling decreased the SBS value ( p < 0.01) and showed less adhesive fracture modes than the other cooling methods. Clinical Significance: Slow cooling seems to affect the veneer resistance and adhesion to the zirconia core; however, the reliability of fast cooling was slightly lower than that of the other methods. # 2013 Elsevier Ltd. Available online at www.sciencedirect.com journal homepage: www.intl.elsevierhealth.com/journals/jden Open access under the Elsevier OA license. 1. Introduction A mismatch of the thermal expansion coefficient (CTE) between feldspathic porcelain and zirconia, as well as the * Corresponding author at: R. Humaita, 1680 Sala 415, Centro. Araraqua E-mail addresses: adabo@foar.unesp.br, gl.adabo@uol.com.br (G.L. 0300-5712 # 2013 Elsevier Ltd. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2013.01.005 Open access under the Elsevier OA license. effect of thermal diffusivity and thermal conductivity upon cooling after sintering, can generate transient and residual stresses and increase the clinical failure rates of zirconia- based restorations.1–9 Below the glass transition temperature (Tg), the porcelain acquires a solid state in which structural ra, SP 14801-903, Brazil. Tel.: +55 16 3301 6415; fax: +55 16 3301 6406. Adabo). http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2013.01.005 mailto:adabo@foar.unesp.br mailto:gl.adabo@uol.com.br http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03005712 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2013.01.005 http://www.elsevier.com/open-access/userlicense/1.0/ http://www.elsevier.com/open-access/userlicense/1.0/ j o u r n a l o f d e n t i s t r y 4 1 ( 2 0 1 3 ) 3 5 6 – 3 6 2 357 rearrangements are impossible and residual stress can develop within the porcelain layer. Stress intensity is directly proportional to the differences in the CTE of the two materials from Tg to room temperature.10 Furthermore, residual stresses in zirconia/porcelain bilayer specimens may be modified by thermal treatment at the Tg interval, variation in cooling rates or the temperature gradient of the internal and external layers of the veneer.4,5,7,11–13 In contrast to metals in metal–ceramic restorations, zirconia has thermal diffusivity lower than that of dental porcelain, and a slow cooling of zirconia retards the balance between the internal and external temperatures. Moreover, the thermal conductivity of zirconia is approximately 15 times smaller than that of alumina and approximately 100 times smaller than that of gold alloys.5,12 Consequently, the cooling process after the firing of porcelain in zirconia-based restora- tions is very slow, resulting in high transitional temperature differences throughout the restoration, especially at the thicker and irregular layers and upon fast cooling. The temperature gradient between the veneer and zirconia core in the fast cooling method may reach up to 140 8C.14 During fast cooling, the temperature of the veneer porcelain in contact with the zirconia core may remain above Tg for a longer period of time, while the surface of the veneer cools at a faster rate. This cooling introduces a high transient thermal gradient between the outer and inner surface. This process results in a high residual tensile stress within the porcelain layer and high tempering/compressive residual stresses on the surface.5,11,12,14 To address these concerns, after March 2009, manufac- turers have recommended slow cooling after porcelain firing to reduce thermal gradients and residual stresses in the porcelain sintering5,7,14 and to decrease the risk for early ceramic chipping.6 The literature provides no standardization in the many different protocols for cooling,3,6,7,11,13–18 and this wide variability among cooling methods produces a confusing nomenclature. For example, slow cooling for one author may be similar to regular cooling for other authors. Therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate how the extreme slow or fast cooling methods influence the flexural strength and shear bond strength of dental feldspathic veneer porcelain for zirconia. In addition, the reliability of the flexural strength was investigated by Weibull analysis. The null hypothesis was that there would be no significant differences in the studied properties of the porcelain when different cooling conditions were used. Table 1 – Materials. Material Manufacturer Main comp (mass ZRHP ProtMat Materiais Avançados, Guaratinguetá, São Paulo, Brazil ZrO2 (94,8); Y2O Vita VM9 Dentin Vita Zahnfabrik, Bad Sackingen, Germany SiO2 (60–64); Al K2O (7–10); Na2 B2O3 (3–5) b a According to the manufacturer. b According to Guess et al.12 2. Materials and methods 2.1. Processing and three-point flexural testing The materials used in this study are described in Table 1. Pre- sintered 3Y-TZP blocks were cut with a diamond disc in a precision cutting machine (Isomet 1000, Buehler, Lake Bluff, USA) and finished using 600-grit size SiC papers in a polishing machine (Metaserv 2000, Buehler, Buehler UK Ltd., Coventry, England). After sintering in a MoSi2 furnace (FE 1800, Maitec, São Carlos, SP, Brazil) at 1530 8C for 2 h, bar-shaped framework specimens had an average final dimension of 22 mm in length � 4.0 mm in width � 0.7 mm in thickness. The dimen- sions of each specimen were measured with a digital caliper (Mitutoyo Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) with precision of 0.01 mm for the calculation of flexural strength. One side of the zirconia framework bars was veneered with Vita VM9. The powder and liquid (VITA Modeling Liquid, VitavZahnfabrik, BadSäckingen, Germany) were mixed to obtain a thin aqueous mixture (washbake layer), which was applied very thinly on the cleaned framework and sintered in the ceramic oven (Aluminipress, EDG, Sao Carlos, SP, Brazil) following the manufacturer’s recommendations. A slurry of porcelain (dentine layer) was prepared by mixing the powder and liquid in a ratio of 2.5:1 and inserted into a polyether mold (Impregum F, 3M ESPE, Seefeld, Germany) that was adapted around the zirconia bars. Excess liquid was blotted with absorbent paper before the specimens were removed from the mold. The specimens were sintered in the oven according to the manufacturer’s instructions. At the end of firing, cooling was performed according to the following experimental protocol: � Slow – samples were left inside the closed, turned-off furnace until they reached room temperature (about 8 h); � Normal – the elevator of the furnace was lowered, and when the temperature inside the furnace reached 500 8C, the samples were removed and cooled at room temperature (about 20 min); � Fast – samples were removed from the furnace immediately after the holding time and blasted by compressed air (less than 10 s). After cooling, the porcelain surface of the specimens was sequentially grounded using 120- to 1200-grit wet SiC paper onents %) Batch number Elastic modulus (GPa) CTE (10�6 8C�1) 3 (5.2) S09-011B 210a 10,1a 2O3 (13–15); O (4–6); 30830 65b 9,2b j o u r n a l o f d e n t i s t r y 4 1 ( 2 0 1 3 ) 3 5 6 – 3 6 2358 discs (Norton Abrasivos, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil) in a polishing machine (Metaserv 2000, Buehler) until achieving final dimensions of 4 � 0.25 mm in width, 1.2 � 0.2 mm in thick- ness and 22 mm in length. The dimensions of the specimens were measured with a digital caliper. Three-point flexural strength testing was carried out in distilled water at 37 8C (�1.0 8C). The sample holder had a 15- mm span between the two rounded steel knife-edge bearers of 0.8-mm radius. The specimens were loaded on the center point by a rounded steel knife edge piston (1.6 mm radius) in a universal testing machine (DL 2000, EMIC, São José dos Pinhais, PR, Brazil) with a 5.0-kN load cell and at a cross head speed of 1.0 mm/min until failure. Specimens were randomly divided into two configurations, according to the cooling method: 1 porcelain side on the sample holder, i.e., porcelain under tensile stress and zirconia under compression stress (PT) (slow n = 30; normal n = 30; fast n = 30); 2 zirconia side on the sample holder, i.e., zirconia under tensile stress and porcelain under compression stress (ZT) (slow n = 30; normal n = 30; fast n = 30). The flexural strength (FS) was calculated according to Eq. (1): s f ¼ 6M wt2 t K 2 þ tc tt þ Ettc Ectc � � (1) where M and K are obtained by Eqs. (2) and (3). M ¼ PL 4 (2) K ¼ 4 þ 6 tc tt � �2 þ Ec Et tc tt � �3 þ Ettt Ectc (3) Replacing M and K in Eq. (1), the Eq. (4) is obtained for the calculation of the bilayer specimens FS19,20: s f ¼ 3EtLPðEct2 c þ 2Ectctt þ Ett2 c Þ 2wðE2 c t2 c þ 4EcEtt3 c tt þ 6EcEtt2 c t2 t þ 4EcEttct3 t þ Et2 c t4 t Þ (4) where sf is the maximum center tensile stress (MPa), P is the load at fracture (N), L is the distance between the supports (mm), Et is the elastic modulus of the material under tensile stress (GPa), Ec is the elastic modulus of the material under compression (GPa), tt is the thickness of the material under tensile stress (mm), tc is the thickness of the material under compression (mm), and w is the specimen’s width (mm). 2.2. Weibull analysis To assess the reliability of the specimens in each configuration test according to the cooling conditions, a Weibull regression analysis was performed on the flexural strength data to determine the Weibull modulus (m) and the characteristic strength (s0). Eq. (5) describes the Weibull distribution: P ¼ 1 � exp � s s0 � �m� � (5) where P is the probability of failure, s is the flexural strength, s0 is the characteristic strength at the fracture probability of 63.21%, and m is the Weibull modulus, which is the slope of the line plotted in the ‘‘ln[ln (1/(1 � P))] vs ln s’’ Cartesian plane. 2.3. Shear bond strength test Square zirconia specimens, 9 mm in length and 2 mm in thickness, were cut and sintered as described above. A wash bake layer was applied and sintered on the surface, and a cylindrical metal mold, 5 mm in diameter and 3 mm in height, was used to build the porcelain layer. Dentine porcelain was sintered according to the manufacturer’s instructions and cooled as previously described (n = 15). After cooling, the zirconia segment of the specimen was embedded in a polyvinyl chloride (PVC) tube with PMMA resin, ensuring that the zirconia/porcelain interface was at the same level as the resin surface. The diameter of porcelain layer of the specimens was measured with digital caliper to calculate the bond area. The specimens were held in a metal device in a universal testing machine (DL 2000, EMIC, São José dos Pinhais, PR, Brazil). The load was applied parallel to the long axis of the specimen via a knife-edge shearing rod at the zirconia/porcelain interface, with a 5.0 kN load cell at a crosshead speed of 1.0 mm/min, until fracture of the sample was achieved. The maximum load at failure was recorded, and the shear bond strength (sSBS – MPa) was calculated according to Eq. (6): sSBS ¼ P pr2 (6) where P is the maximum failure load (N) and r is the ratio of porcelain circumference (mm2). Failure modes of the SBS test were classified according to: (1) adhesive failure at the veneering porcelain/substrate interface (AD); (2) cohesive failure within the veneering porcelain (CO); and (3) the combination of adhesive and cohesive failures (AC).2 2.4. Statistics Statistical analyses for flexural strength and shear bond strength were performed by one-way ANOVA (a < 0.05) and Tukey’s post hoc test for multiple comparisons. 3. Results The means of the three-point flexural strength measures (sf), the standard deviations (SD), and the coefficients of variation (CV) of specimens with porcelain under tension (PT) and zirconia under tension (ZT) according to cooling method are shown in Table 2. One-way ANOVA for the PT specimen configuration was significant (F2,87 = 10.46, p < 0.01), and Tukey’s post hoc test showed that fast cooling leads to significantly higher mean sf values than the slow and normal cooling methods, which were not different from each other. On the other hand, one-way ANOVA for the ZT specimen configuration was not significant (F2,87 = 2.90, p = 0.06). The Weibull statistical analyses (Table 2) showed that the normal cooling specimens exhibited slightly higher values than those that underwent fast or slow cooling, for both Table 2 – Means of flexural strength (sf, MPa), standard deviations (SD), coefficients of variation (CV, %), Weibull modulus (m), characteristic strengths (s0, MPa) and R- values of specimens with porcelain under tension (PT configuration) and specimens with zirconia under ten- sion (ZT configuration) according to cooling method. Parameters Flexural strength Weibull analysis sf (SD) CV m s0 R-value PT configuration PT-SLOW 50.4 (11.8)B 23.5% 4.7 54.8 0.973 PT-NORMAL 52.3 (9.5)B 18.1% 6.2 56.1 0.956 PT-FAST 64.2 (15.0)A 23.3% 4.7 69.9 0.987 ZT configuration ZT-SLOW 611.6 (127.3)ns 20.8% 5.2 661.3 0.966 ZT-NORMAL 612.8 (125.6)ns 20.5% 5.4 663.9 0.974 ZT-FAST 685.2 (151.7)ns 22.1% 4.7 747.5 0.989 Different letters within the PT configuration and ZT configurations indicate that flexural strength was significantly different between groups ( p < 0.05). j o u r n a l o f d e n t i s t r y 4 1 ( 2 0 1 3 ) 3 5 6 – 3 6 2 359 specimen configurations. In the PT configuration, slow and fast were equal, but in the ZT configuration, slow cooling specimens exhibited a higher Weibull modulus than fast- cooling specimens. The mean shear bond strength of porcelain bonded to zirconia that underwent slow cooling was 15.9 (4.5) MPa; normal cooling was 19.5 (4.6) MPa; and fast cooling was 20.9 (4.4) MPa. One-way ANOVA showed a significant difference for the shear bond strengths among the cooling methods tested (F2,42 = 5.430, p < 0.01). Tukey’s post hoc test for multiple comparisons showed that the mean SBS of the slow-cooling method was lower than those of the normal- and fast-cooling methods, which were similar to each other. After the SBS test, the following failure modes were observed for slow (AD 40%; CO 33%; AC 27%), normal (AD 67%; AC 33%), and fast cooling (AD 67%; CO 13%; AC 20%). 4. Discussion The final dimensions of the utilized bilayer flexural strength specimens were chosen based on the monolayer specimen tests (ISO 6972:2008) with a thickness ratio of 1:1. This study conducted two flexural strength test configurations (porce- lain or zirconia under tension), submerged in water at 37 8C. The results indicated that the material on the bottom surface determines the strength and failure mode of the system.19–24 According to the selected mathematic equation, flexural strength depends directly on the elastic modulus of the material under tension21–23 because the maximum load is concentrated on the bottom surface of the sample. There- fore, a higher flexural strength was achieved when zirconia was under tension. Nevertheless, there were two distinct failure modes according to the test configurations. When porcelain was under tension (PT), flaws initiated in the bottom surface and propagated throughout the porcelain until they reached the interface. At this moment, the tests were stopped and the zirconia layer was not impaired. When the zirconia was under tension (ZT), the porcelain delami- nated before the fracture of the zirconia due to lateral flaw formation and the crushing of the loading area on the porcelain.20,25 The flexural strength values of ZT specimens are lower compared to the published values for zirconia monolayer specimens12,20,24,26,27 because the compression stress induces failure of the porcelain before the zirconia under tension. Nevertheless, the ZT test configuration was per- formed because it is believed that failures originate at the internal surfaces of crowns.19,24,27 To decrease the failure rate, studies20,24 have suggested that the areas of restora- tions or fixed partial dentures that are submitted to a high concentration of tensile stress where esthetics is not needed (such as the bottom of the pontic and connectors) should be free of the veneered layer to increase the mechanical performance. However, zirconia is susceptible to degradation at low temperatures when exposed to a humid environment.28 Special attention should be paid to the great variability of cooling methods that are described in the literature with no standardization3,6,7,11,13–18 (Table 3). These differences lead to difficulties in comparing results and do not allow a consensual conclusion for which cooling method must be used. For example, some studies refer to a specific method as ‘‘slow,’’ but this method is actually similar to normal in our and other studies. Furthermore, porcelain manufacturers are unclear about the ideal cooling method, referring only to ‘‘slow.’’ In our study, extreme cooling protocols (fast and slow) were performed to identify the changes in the properties of veneer and zirconia bilayer specimens. In the fast method, the specimens were cooled by blasting compressed air immedi- ately after the holding time of sintering, that is, from 910 8C to room temperature in less than 10 s. In the slow-cooling method, the specimens were left inside the switched-off furnace for more than 8 h. The null hypothesis that the flexural strength and reliability would not be influenced by the cooling method was partially rejected. The higher flexural strength observed for PT-FAST may be related to the tempering of the porcelain due to a high cooling rate and a large difference in the thermal gradient. This may induce a non-uniform solidification from the surface to the center, leading to residual compressive stress on the veneer surface5,6,29,30 and increasing the strength.4,6 On the other hand, in this study, it was observed that the PT-NORMAL showed a slightly higher Weibull modulus (m). The clinical success of ceramic restorations depends on the structural reliability of the dental ceramics. Higher Weibull modulus (m) values represent a more homogenous distribution of flaws, a lower dispersion of values, and a higher reliability of the material.19,24,27 In this study, in spite of the fact that the PT-FAST group exhibited a higher flexural strength, this group presented higher disper- sion values and, consequently, lower reliability. This might be related to the possible increase in the incidence of cracks when fast cooling is performed. Guazzato et al.7 observed an increase in the crack rate in porcelain cooled with a fast cooling rate, which affected adversely its strength, despite their cooling method had not been as extreme as the fast method employed in our study (Table 3). Moreover, Belli et al.31 performed cyclic fatigue test on pre-molar crowns submitted to fast and slow cooling and observed that cracks on VM9 Table 3 – Comparison among studies that evaluated different cooling methods in porcelain/zirconia specimens. Authors (year) Design of specimens (v:c thickness ratio) Cooling method Classified Compared to our study Taskonak et al. (2008)13 Bilayer disks (6:10) Immediate Fast Fast Monolayer disks Inside the furnace Slow Slow Zhang et al. (2009)11 Monolayer disks Bilayer plates (6:1) Inside the furnace In ambient air at room temperature Tempered by blasting compressed air Slow Normal Fast Slow Normal Fast Gostemeyer et al. (2010)6 Bilayer rectangular plate (1:1) Inside the furnace for 5 min Immediately in ambient air Slow Rapid Normal? ? Guazzato et al. (2010)7 Bilayer spheres (1:2; 1:1) Immediately moved to the furnace bench Fast ? According to the manufacturer’s recommendations Normal ? Komine et al. (2010)3 Bilayer disks Outside the furnace for 4 min until reaching Tg Slow Normal Immediately in ambient air Rapid ? Rues et al. (2010)15 Central incisor crowns Conventional firing Protocol 1 Normal? Extra cooling time of 6 min after glaze firing Protocol 2 ? Extra cooling time of 6 min after all firings Protocol 3 ? Choi et al. (2011)16 Bilayer plate (1:1; 2:1) Porcelain Monolayer plate Force cooled with compressed air Removed when the temperature of furnace dropped Stopped the descent of the muffle and waited until 100 �C. Fast Normal Slow Fast Normal Slow Mainjot et al. (2011)17 Bilayer disks (2:1) Opened furnace Classic Normal Inside the switched-off furnace from 900 8C to 600 8C Modified Slow At a rate of 2 8C/min in special furnace Slow ? Tholey et al. (2011)14 Crowns with uniform and anatomical frameworks Inside the furnace until 600 8C Slow ? Opened the chamber directly and switched off the furnace Fast Normal? Tan et al. (2012)18 Beam of zirconia with porcelain button (3:1) Removed as soon as the muffle had fully descended Fast ? Left in the muffle for 7.5 min until reaching 500 8C Moderate Normal Left in the partially (30%) open muffle for 15 min until reaching a muffle temperature of 500 8C. Slow ? Belli et al.31 Premolar crowns Immediately in ambient air Fast ? Left in the partially (10%) open muffle until reaching a muffle temperature of 200 8C. Slow ? j o u r n a l o f d e n t i s t r y 4 1 ( 2 0 1 3 ) 3 5 6 – 3 6 2360 specimens grew less under slow regimen and it increased the lifetime of zirconia–porcelain prostheses. Despite the statistical similarities among the flexural strength values of the ZT configuration groups according to the different methods, ZT-NORMAL exhibited a higher m value than ZT-SLOW and ZT-FAST. Although the strength value is important, it may not be extrapolated to predict the structural performance of the ceramic. Chipping and delaminating of porcelain in zirconia-based restorations has occurred clinically, and these processes are considered to be the most common clinical failures.8,9 The bond strength may be explained by the inherent fragility of the interface between the core and veneer, or it may be simply due to the weak strength of the porcelain layer and can be influenced by the materials,3,6 surface treatments of zirco- nia32, cooling rate after sintering3,6,14 or bond strength tests.3,6,14 In this study, fast and normal cooling methods led to significantly higher SBS values and showed predomi- nantly adhesive failure mode between VM9 porcelain and zirconia. These results may be attributed to compressive/ tempering stresses in the porcelain layer under faster cooling, which can improve the resistance of the surface layer6 and to develop high residual tension on the zirconia/ porcelain interface,5,7,14 which led to the predominance of adhesive failure mode. In contrast, the slow cooling method had lower SBS value and higher incidence of cohesive and combination failure modes. However, a direct comparison to other studies is difficult once, to the authors’ knowledge, there is any published bond strength investigation that used slow cooling method comparable to that used in this study. The cohesive failure mode is more related to porcelain strength than to its adhesion to the zirconia core.1 In slower cooling regimen, the tempering does not occur because tensile stresses are generated in the porcelain due to structural relaxation of the glass above and around the Tg.5,6,13,29 Moreover, as discussed before, PT-SLOW group in flexural strength test showed lower mean value than PT-FAST. It is possible that porcelain in slow cooling method had resistance below than that for the adhesion between veneer and zirconia. j o u r n a l o f d e n t i s t r y 4 1 ( 2 0 1 3 ) 3 5 6 – 3 6 2 361 Komine et al.3 observed that depending on porcelain material, slow cooling increased the SBS between veneer and zirconia, and all specimens showed cohesive fracture, however they used other porcelain brand marks (CZR and e.Max Ceram), the surface of zirconia specimens was air- blasted with Al2O3 and the slow cooling used was similar to our normal cooling (Table 3). Despite Gostemeyer et al.6 also had observed the dependence on porcelain material, they showed that slow cooling method (similar to our normal cooling – Table 3) adversely affected the strain energy release in four-point bending test and prevailed the combination fracture mode for VM9 and Triceram but there were no effect of cooling methods on Zirox and Lava Ceram. Tan et al.,14 using modified four-point flexural technique with VM9 porcelain button under beams of zirconia, observed that slow cooling (intermediary to our normal and slow cooling method) increased the fracture load and the visual fracture analysis owed a thin layer of porcelain on the zirconia, classified as cohesive mode. Nevertheless, no direct clinical correlation should be made between failures in shear bond studies with the failure mechanisms of restorations because the testing methods do not reproduce clinical conditions.33 Ideally, long-term clinical trials should be used to determine the failure mechanisms for all-ceramic restorations. Moreover, while a fracture bond strength value higher than 25 MPa is accepted as adequate for metal–ceramics, the acceptable bond strength for all-ceramic materials has not yet been determined.34 Moreover, the bonding mechanisms between zirconia and porcelain are unclear.2,12 Surface treatments seem to damage the structure of zirconia due to its martensitic transformation from the tetragonal to monoclinic phase.26,28 Some porcelain brands require a surface liner before porcelain application; the porcelain samples used in this study necessitated a washbake layer. Thus, the effects of chemical bonding and microme- chanical retention, as well as the improvement of the wettability of zirconia, are active areas of research. While a fracture bond strength value higher than 25 MPa is accepted as adequate for metal–ceramics, the acceptable bond strength for all-ceramic materials has not yet been deter- mined.34 Moreover, the bonding mechanisms between zirco- nia and porcelain are unclear.2,12 Surface treatments seem to damage the structure of zirconia due to its martensitic transformation from the tetragonal to monoclinic phase.26,28 Some porcelain brands require a surface liner before porcelain application; the porcelain samples used in this study necessitated a washbake layer. Thus, the effects of chemical bonding and micromechanical retention, as well as the improvement of the wettability of zirconia, are active areas of research. This study has some limitations that make it difficult to directly relate its results to clinical situations. The tempera- ture distribution of specimens is complex and depends on the thermal proprieties of the materials, the cooling rate, the gradient and distribution of temperature, the support of the materials inside the oven, and the thickness, preparation and design.5,14,30 In this study, plate specimens were used to investigate the effect of extreme cooling methods under controlled conditions for the mechanical tests.35 However, the geometry of dental crowns and FPDs is multifaceted, with a sphero-cylindrical form, heterogeneous contours and varia- tions in the thickness of the veneer and core.1,2,5,10,36 Furthermore, the microstructure of porcelain, the thickness ratio, the manufacturing process, the flaw population (num- ber, distribution, and size), the occlusal adjustment, moisture, thermal and load cycling, and individual habits also have influences on the fracture resistance of the veneering porcelain and its clinical reliability.15,24,27,36 Therefore, in vitro thermal, chemical and mechanical fatigue studies should be conducted using complex specimens as crowns, which are submitted to various cooling methods with different zirconia ceramic/veneering porcelain systems; the thickness ratio in humid environments should also be further studied. Moreover, more randomized clinical trials are necessary to evaluate the actual performance of this zirconia-based method of restoration.9 5. Conclusion The fast-cooling method showed a higher flexural strength but a lower reliability in porcelain under tension test configura- tions. The slow-cooling method decreased the shear bond strength and showed higher cohesive and combination failure modes. These results suggest that the cooling method may affect the longevity of zirconia-based restorations. Thus, other investigations are needed to establish the ideal cooling protocol. r e f e r e n c e s 1. Fischer J, Stawarzcyk B, Trottmann A, Hammerle CH. Impact of thermal misfit on shear strength of veneering ceramic/ zirconia composites. Dental Materials 2009;25:419–23. 2. Saito A, Komine F, Blatz MB, Matsumura H. A comparison of bond strength of layered veneering porcelains to zirconia and metal. Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry 2010;104:247–57. 3. 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Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry 2004;91:349–55. 35. Aboushelib MN, de Jager N, Kleverlaan CJ, Feilzer AJ. Effect of loading method on the fracture mechanics of two layered all-ceramic restorative systems. Dental Materials 2007;23:952–9. 36. DeHoff PH, Anusavice KJ. Viscoelastic finite element stress analysis of the thermal compatibility of dental bilayer ceramic systems. International Journal of Prosthodontics 2009;22:56–61. Effects of extreme cooling methods on mechanical properties and shear bond strength of bilayered porcelain/3Y-TZP specimens 1 Introduction 2 Materials and methods 2.1 Processing and three-point flexural testing 2.2 Weibull analysis 2.3 Shear bond strength test 2.4 Statistics 3 Results 4 Discussion 5 Conclusion References