Lecture 11 Flashcards
what is the organic component of dental waxes?
hydrocarbon (paraffin) and a high molecular weight ester
the hardness, melting range, and flow depend on the amounts of various waxes and the mol. structure of the organic ‘cules in the mixtures
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what are important properties of wax/
- melting range
- excess residue
- flow
- thermal expansion–heating a cooling cycles lead to dimensional distortion
- residual stress –stress remaining in the wax as a result of manip. during heating, cooling, bending, carving, etc –>can be avoided by carving when wax is close to melting temp and with warm instruments
what are the types of waxes?
- pattern waxes
2. processing waxes
describe pattern waxes
used to fabricate restoration using lost wax technique
include:
inlay wax–>fabricated for crowns, inlays, or bridges
casting wax–>form wax patterns of metalic framework of removable prosthos
baseplate wax–>used for baseplate of denture; build the contours of the denture to hold the position of the denture teeth
resins –> higher strength, lower flow, and burnout without residue (important!!!)
what are processing waxes?
used for auxillary roles in the fabrication of models, impressions, and in soldering
- boxing and utility wax–> soft, pliable waxes for taking impressions
- sticky wax –> hard and brittle at room temp but becomes sticky when heated, and sticks to dry stone or other dental materials; can assemble metallic or resin pieces, or as a sealant
- corrective impression wax: used as a veneer over an original impression to register the details of the soft tissue in the functional state
- bite registration wax–>accurate artic. of certain models of opposing arches