On the<i>in vitro</i>Fatigue Behavior of Human Dentin: Effect of Mean Stress
Journal of Dental Research 83(3): 211-215
Article 2004 English
Authors
RN
R.K. Nalla
JK
J.H. Kinney
SM
S.J. Marshall
Abstract
1 min read
Human dentin is susceptible to failure under repetitive cyclic-fatigue loading. This investigation seeks to address the paucity of data that reliably quantify this phenomenon. Specifically, the effect of alternating vs. mean stresses, characterized by the stress- or load-ratio R (ratio of minimum-to-maximum stress), was investigated for three R values (−1, 0.1, and 0.5). Dentin was observed to be prone to fatigue failure under cyclic stresses, with susceptibility varying, depending upon the stress level. The “stress-life” ( S/N) data obtained are discussed in the context of constant-life diagrams for fatigue failure. The results provide the first fatigue data for human dentin under tension-compression loading and serve to map out safe and unsafe regimes for failure over a wide range of in vitro fatigue lives (< 10 3 to > 10 6 cycles).
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