METHOD OF MAKING A DENTAL RESTORATION
20170258565 · 2017-09-14
Inventors
- Bastian P. Kirchner (Fuerstenfeldbruck, DE)
- Till Meurer (Bonn, DE)
- Dajana Zimmermann (Eching am Ammersee, DE)
Cpc classification
A61C13/34
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61C13/0022
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61C13/0003
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61C13/082
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A method of making a dental restoration has the step of providing a precursor of the dental restoration. The dental restoration has at least a first and a second surface portion which are delimited by a physical boundary structure. The method further has the steps of applying a first coloring solution associated with the first surface portion onto the first surface portion, sintering the dental restoration precursor, and removing the physical boundary structure.
Claims
1. A method of making a dental restoration, comprising the steps of: providing a precursor of the dental restoration which has an outer surface, the outer surface having at least a first and a second surface portion which are delimited by a physical boundary structure; applying a first coloring solution associated with the first surface portion onto the first surface portion; sintering the dental restoration precursor to form a preliminary dental restoration; and removing the physical boundary structure to form the dental restoration.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of applying a second coloring solution associated with the second surface portion onto the second surface portion.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein at least the first surface portion comprises first physical indicia indicative of a first dental restoration color associated with the first surface portion.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the first physical indicia are formed by a surface structure which comprises first surface structure elements of a repetitive geometrically defined shape.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the first surface structure elements comprise a plurality of uniformly spaced elongated bulges, or a plurality of projections of a repetitive shape.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the bulges extend parallel relative to each other, and wherein the shape of the projections is selected from among a circular area, a hexagonal area or a rectangular area.
7. The method of claim 3, wherein the second surface portion comprises second physical indicia indicative of a second dental restoration color associated with the second surface portion.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the second physical indicia are formed by a surface structure which comprises second surface structure elements of a repetitive geometrically defined shape.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the second surface structure elements comprise a plurality of uniformly spaced elongated bulges, or a plurality of projections of a repetitive shape.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the bulges extend parallel relative to each other, and wherein the shape of the projections is selected from among a circular area, a hexagonal area or a rectangular area.
11. The method of claim 8, wherein the physical boundary structure is formed by the change-over between the first and second surface structure elements at the boundary between the first and the second surface portion.
12. The method of claim 3 , wherein at least the first physical indicia embody a code, selected from among a digit, a character, alphanumerical information or symbols.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the boundary structure is formed by a continuous bulge protruding from the dental restoration precursor on the boundary between the first and second surface portion.
14. The method of claim 1, further comprising the steps of: providing a virtual three-dimensional model of the dental restoration; defining a first boundary of the first surface portion associated with a desired first dental restoration color; defining a second boundary of the second surface portion associated with a desired second dental restoration color; along at least a portion of the first boundary and the second boundary in which the first boundary and the second boundary coincide, building up a virtual boundary structure; and creating a three-dimensional model of the dental restoration precursor based on the dental restoration model and the virtual boundary structure.
15. A kit of parts, comprising a plurality of different coloring solutions, and instructions for use defining the steps of the method of claim 1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0034]
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[0037]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0038]
[0039] The dental restoration precursor 1 has a first surface portion 11 and a second surface portion 12. The first and second surface portion 11, 12 are portions of an outer surface of the dental restoration precursor. The first surface portion 11 has first physical indicia 13 and the second surface portion 12 has second physical indicia 14. In the example the first physical indicia 13 comprise uniformly spaced linear bulges, particularly in a pattern of a hatching, whereas the second physical indicia 14 comprise surface structure elements in the form of a raised pattern, in particular a pattern defining uniformly spaced and sized dots between. The first and second physical indicia 13, 14 form raised structures with respect to a proportionally three-dimensionally enlarged outer surface of the finished (sintered) dental restoration.
[0040] The first physical indicia 13 is indicative of a first coloring solution to be applied on the first surface portion 11, and the second physical indicia 14 is indicative of a second coloring solution to be applied on the second surface portion 12. A user, for example a dental technician, therefore is enabled to identify the appropriate coloring solution to be applied onto the first and/or second surface portion 11, 12 directly from the respective first and/or second surface portion 11, 12. The first and second coloring solution each are configured to provide the finished dental restoration with a first and second dental restoration color, respectively.
[0041] Further, in the example the first physical indicia 13 and the second physical indicia 14 each visibly define the first and second surface portion 11, 12, respectively. In particular, each of the surface structure elements forming the first and second indicia 13, 14 are distributed over the entire first and second surface portion 11, 12, respectively, and thus also define a boundaries of the first and second surface portion 11, 12. The boundary between the first and second surface portion is also clearly visible from the change-over between the differently structured physical indicia 13, 14. In this example therefore the change-over between the different patterns of the physical indicia form the physical boundary of the invention. Therefore, the user is enabled to recognize the boundaries of the first and second surface portion 11, 12, and to apply the respective first and second coloring solution to the appropriate area of the first and second surface portion 11, 12.
[0042]
[0043] The raised bulge 15 optically indicates to a user, for example a dental technician, the boundary between the first and second surface portion 11′, 12′. Further, raised bulge 15 physically hinders any coloring solution applied on the first or second surface portion 11′, 12′ in flowing beyond the raised bulge 15 toward the respective other first or second surface portion 11′, 12′. Therefore the raised bulge 15 is capable of physically helping a user to provide the coloring solution precisely to desired surface portions of the dental restoration precursor.
[0044]
[0045]
[0046] The software may have functionality to adjust the color resolution, meaning the number of different colors to which the captured or measured colors are assigned. In a relatively simple example the natural color gradation of a tooth may be represented by only two standard tooth colors. However, the invention further enables the representation of the natural color gradation in more than two standard tooth colors.
[0047] The boundaries of the different color areas are used to create the physical boundary structure either in the form of a regular pattern as illustrated in
[0048] The dental restoration model in the example—irrespective of the presence of the physical boundary structure—represents the dental restoration based on its final shape and dimensions, in particular after sintering. Accordingly the design can be performed without considering any sintering shrinkage at that stage. Once the design is finished the dental restoration model is three-dimensionally enlarged based on three factors which are based on the sintering shrinkage and a dental restoration precursor is machined or built up based on the three-dimensionally enlarged dental restoration precursor.
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