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      Analysis of fracture and deformation modes in teeth subjected to occlusal loading.

      Acta Biomaterialia
      Anisotropy, Bite Force, Compressive Strength, Computer Simulation, Dental Occlusion, Dental Occlusion, Traumatic, physiopathology, Elastic Modulus, Humans, Models, Biological, Tooth, Tooth Fractures, Weight-Bearing

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          Abstract

          An analysis of fracture and deformation modes in tooth enamel subjected to occlusal loading is presented. Several competing modes are identified: deformation by yield beneath the indenter; median cracking from the ensuing plastic zone and analogous radial cracking from the dentin-enamel junction along the load axis; and margin cracking from the cervical enamel-cement junction. The analysis, based on a simple model of tooth geometry, presents relations for the critical loads to initiate these damage modes within the enamel, and to drive ensuing cracks longitudinally around the tooth walls to failure. The relations are explicit in their dependence on characteristic tooth dimensions - enamel thickness and cuspal radius - and on material properties - modulus, hardness, toughness and strength. Provision is made to incorporate properties of the occlusal contact, whether from opposing dentition or intervening food particles. All these features are demonstrated on critical-load master diagrams. A characteristic feature of the damage evolution is the gradual evolution of each mode with increasing load, so that failure is generally a prolonged rather than abrupt event. This accounts for the remarkable damage tolerance of natural teeth. The equations may enable basic predictions of tooth responses for humans and animals under a variety of specified dietary and functional conditions.

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