Method of producing a dental restoration
10040134 ยท 2018-08-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Malte Korten (Moorenweis, DE)
- Daniel Oberpertinger (Gauting, DE)
- Rudolf Schmid (Eichenau, DE)
- Anja B. Fischer (Hechendorf, DE)
Cpc classification
B23C3/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G05B2219/49021
PHYSICS
G05B19/4099
PHYSICS
A61C13/0004
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61C13/0022
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B23C3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61C13/082
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
B23C3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present invention relates to a method of producing a dental restoration from a partially-sintered or non-sintered blank using a three-dimensional dental restoration model, comprising the steps of: generating at least one or more first milling path for rough and/or fine milling; determining areas or zones of increased stress in the three-dimensional dental restoration model and generating at least one modified milling path; machining the blank by milling utilizing one or more first milling paths; selectively machining parts of the blank utilizing at least one modified milling path; and sintering the machined blank.
Claims
1. A method of producing a dental restoration from a partially-sintered or non-sintered blank using a three-dimensional dental restoration model, the method comprising: generating, by a computer module, at least one or more first milling paths for rough and/or fine milling; determining, by the computer module, areas or zones of increased stress in the three-dimensional dental restoration model; generating, by the computer module and based on the determined areas or zones of increased stress, at least one modified milling path; machining the blank by milling utilising the one or more first milling paths; selectively machining parts of the blank utilising the at least one modified milling path to produce a machined blank; and sintering the machined blank.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the one or more first milling paths are determined by milling parameters selected from the group consisting of: blank starting materials and properties thereof, desired dental restoration surface quality and geometry, geometry and abrasion of the milling tool, economical parameters, computation time, parameters and specifications of the milling machine.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein machining the blank by milling utilising one or more first milling paths further comprises: determining the one or more first milling paths; firstly machining the blank by infeeding a milling tool by a predetermined value in a vertical direction until a lowest milling point of the blank is reached; and secondly machining the blank by line-by-line milling.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein determining areas or zones of increased stress in the three-dimensional dental restoration model is achieved using finite element analysis.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein said dental restoration is formed from zirconium oxide or aluminium oxide ceramics.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the dental restoration is selected from the group consisting of: crowns, bridges, implants, dentures, tooth replacements, inlays, onlays and Maryland bridges.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein the three-dimensional dental restoration model is obtained by scanning a dental impression or by performing an intraoral scan.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein determining, by the computer module, the areas or zones of increased stress comprises determining the areas or zones of increased stress in response to receiving data indicative of a user input manually identifying the areas or zones of increased stress in the three-dimensional dental restoration model.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein generating the at least one modified milling path comprises: generating the at least one modified milling path such that the at least one modified milling path does not intersect itself.
10. The method according to claim 1, wherein selectively machining parts of the blank utilising a modified milling path to produce a milled blank further comprises: determining a single second milling path that has a single point of entry between a milling tool and the blank and a single exit point, a cutting edge of the milling tool being in contact with the blank throughout.
11. The method according to claim 10, wherein determining a single second milling path that has a single point of entry between the milling tool and the blank and a single exit point ensures that no area of the blank is machined more than once.
12. The method according to claim 11, wherein determining a single second milling path that has a single point of entry between the milling tool and the blank and a single exit point further comprises: determining a constant three-dimensional step width milling path that is consistent in the direction of a burr removal.
13. The method according to claim 11, wherein the single second milling path does not intersect itself.
14. The method according to claim 11, wherein selectively machining parts of the blank utilising a single second milling path ensures that a constant amount of material is removed from the blank.
15. The method according to claim 11, wherein selectively machining parts of the blank utilising a single second milling path ensures that a cutting force between the tool and the blank is substantially the same and which depends on the geometry of the blank.
16. A computer-readable medium having computer-readable instructions which implement the following procedures: generating, by a computer module, a three-dimensional dental restoration model from scanned dental data; generating, by the computer module, at least one or more first milling paths for rough and/or fine milling a ceramic blank; determining, by the computer module, areas or zones of increased stress in the three-dimensional dental restoration model; generating, by the computer module and based on the determined areas or zones of increased stress, at least one modified milling path; machining the blank by milling utilising the one or more first milling paths; selectively machining parts of the blank utilising the at least one modified milling path to produce a machined blank; and sintering the machined blank.
17. A method of producing a dental restoration, the method comprising: producing a blank; machining the blank by milling utilising one or more first milling paths; selectively machining the blank in areas or zones of increased stress by milling utilising a second milling path that has a single point of entry between a cutting edge of a milling tool and the blank and a single exit point, the cutting edge of the milling tool being in contact with the blank throughout to produce a machined blank, wherein the second milling path does not intersect itself; and sintering the machined blank.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention will now be described by way of example only, and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
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(5)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(9) The present invention has adopted the approach of determining the areas or zones of increased stress in a three-dimensional dental restoration model (e.g. around the connectors of a ceramic bridge restoration) and then generating a modified milling strategy to make those areas more stress resistant with a higher fracture strength with fewer surface defects. Advantageously, this increase in fracture strength is also coupled with a reduction in variance and, therefore, increased manufacturing confidence. Consequently, the use of the present invention will significantly expand the clinical indication spectrum of digital restorative dentistry.
(10)
(11) Current zirconia milling strategies produce milling paths 12 depending on the restoration 10 geometry and the needed precision. The inner contour of a dental restoration 10 is typically milled more precisely than the outer contour. Furthermore, the milling paths 12 typically change when the surface of the tooth replacement or bridge changes.
(12) In general, a conventional milling process 12 is divided into rough milling and a finishing step. The aim of the rough milling is the efficient removal of material until a predefined material offset remains. The finishing process seeks to enhance the precision and the surface quality of the milled part. The infeeding of steep areas (>30) is constant in z-direction (vertical direction), meaning that horizontal milling paths are increased by a predefined value in the z-direction after finishing each turn until the lowest point of the geometry is reached.
(13) After that the remaining material in shallow areas <30 would be removed by line-by-line milling to define the final surface. The milling paths 12 generally intersect each other in the range of 5. That means the milling tool will go empty (i.e. not remove any material) as the milling proceeds and likely damage the surface of the restoration 10. This conventional milling process described herein is often referred to in the art as a combined milling strategy as it includes a combination of rough and fine milling passes.
(14)
(15) Surprisingly, it has been found that a significant increase in the fracture strength of zirconia ceramic parts can be obtained by adapting the milling process with milling strategies that are known from milling non-ceramic materials.
(16) As before, the CAM module can develop, depending on the dental indication, standardised milling strategies, including the combined milling strategy, as described above with reference to
(17) The present invention differs from known CAD/CAM processes in that the CAM module is adapted to determine areas or zones of increased or higher stress in the three-dimensional dental restoration model and then to generate a modified milling path for selectively machining the restoration 10 in those areas or zones of increased stress. It has been found that intersecting milling tracks 12 from combined milling strategies are often the cause for early cracks in zirconia parts. By avoiding intersecting milling areas, such as those depicted in
(18) After the calculation of both the combined 12 and modified milling tracks 16, the CAM module of the present invention translates the complete milling sequence to machine code and this is sent to the milling machine for commencement of the milling process. The milling of the ceramic part 10 then occurs utilising the combined milling strategy and the increased or higher stress parts of the three-dimensional dental restoration model are selectively machined utilising the computed modified milling path.
(19) After the zirconia restoration 10 is milled, a subsequent sintering stage is then needed to achieve the final shape and mechanical properties. The three-dimensional dental restoration model is also scaled accordingly to take into account the predicted shrinkage that occurs during the sintering phase.
(20) Selectively machining parts of the ceramic restoration 10 utilising the modified milling path can be achieved by using what is termed a 3D constant milling strategy. This 3D constant or modified strategy does not divide the surface of the milled part into flat and steep areas. The milling tracks were calculated in a way that none of the areas that have to be machined will be machined twice. Due to this the cutting edge of the tool will always cut some material. Surface defects, oscillations and flaws are avoided since the milling tool will not have an empty run or pass on the surface of the restoration 10.
(21) In addition, the modified 3D constant milling strategy calculates a three-dimensional step width depending on the geometry of the processed surface that is constant in the direction of material removal. The consequence is that the tool/burr removes a constant amount of material from the restoration 10, independent of the surface geometry. Thus the cutting force between burr and ceramic restoration 10 is almost the same, and is independent of the steepness of the processed surface. Empty runs of burrs on the final surface of the restoration 10, and sudden changes in the amount of the removed material, both lead to uncontrolled oscillations/vibrations in the tool/burr that cause surface defects. Surface defects decrease the strength of the resultant ceramic dental restoration 10.
(22) The milling of green state (non-sintered) zirconia is very different to the milling of metals and non-ceramics because of specific ceramic characteristics like brittleness, grain structure disturbing the normal milling process or abrasion and engagement of the tool. Milling zirconia is therefore a specific field and has special limitations.
(23) Since the final quality of the machined surface has a direct influence on the fracture toughness, a smoother surface with a reduced number of flaws increases the strength. This effect, combined with the determination of areas or zones of increased stress in the restoration and only selectively machining these areas, results in a much better dental restoration by minimising the extra time effort of using this modified milling strategy only selectivity on the higher stress areas.
(24) By combining a finite element analysis calculation with the calculation of the milling paths it is possible to determine higher stress areas of the restoration 10. For example, for a dental restoration 10 being formed as a five unit bridge framework, the finite element analysis to determine higher stress areas of the restoration 10 is performed in the same manner as for the calculation of the milling paths. A five unit bridge restoration 10 is designed with the outer units designed as hemispheric ball cups, and the counter bearing for the storage of the restoration 10 being ball end stumps. Force was applied at the outer pontics, not at the centre pontic. Due to the pivotable arrangement and a possible relative movement between the stumps an ideal four point bending test was simulated. The finite element analysis showed a maximum of stress at the bottom side of the connectors. The stress along the connectors with constant cross section was about the same. This is consistent with the theoretical results of a four point bending test. Therefore those areas of the restoration 10 with maximum stress could be located and localised.
(25) It is possible to mark these areas and adapt the milling strategy automatically using design rules in the CAD/CAM software, or it is another option to mark these areas manually during the CAD design and adapt the milling paths of these marked areas as described. The manual marking of the CAD design could be undertaken by the dental technician, who often has experience and a sense of where the areas or zones of increased stress in the restoration 10 are likely to be located.
(26) The below-mentioned milling parameters have shown best results in the milling machine of the 3M EPSE Lava digital dentistry system: Rotational speed: 11,500 rpm to 40,000 rpm Feeding: 400 mm/min to 2400 mm/min Axial step width: 0.05 mm to 0.8 mm Radial step width: 0.05 mm to 0.8 mm
(27)
(28) It has been found that by changing the milling strategy to modified 3D constant instead of the conventional combined milling strategy that separates the surface of the milled parts into flat and steep areas, it is possible to increase the mean value of initial fracture strength of the restoration by up to 25%, and also decrease the standard deviation.
(29)
(30) In the left hand side of
(31) Following sintering, the fracture strength of each of the ten dental restorations machined using a combined (standard 3M ESPE Lava) milling strategy (the right hand of
(32) For the measurement of the fracture force a load is applied on each of the inner pontics, except the centre pontic. The arrangement of the applied force and the stumps as counter bearings is in accordance with a four point bending test of EN ISO NORM 6872. The advantage of this test is, that the applied forces cause constant stress between the force transmission points in sections with equal cross section, e.g. the area of the connectors. The applied force was slowly increased till the restoration fractured. The fracture of the restoration was detected and the maximum force was stored. The resultant fracture strengths are shown in
(33) The measurement of fracture strength was repeated in two further sets of ceramic dental restorations, as shown in
(34) A summary of the results from
(35) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Average fracture Standard Average fracture Standard strength of deviation of strength of deviation of restorations restorations restorations restorations produced by produced by produced by produced by modified 3D modified 3D standard 3M standard 3M constant milling constant milling ESPE Lava ESPE Lava strategy (N) strategy (N) milling strategy (N) milling strategy (N) Lava Plus 841 76 676 73 Sample #1 Lava Frame 980 134 823 112 Sample #2 Lava Frame 962 68 793 100 Sample #3
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(37) By increasing the fracture strength, the cross sectional area and wall thicknesses of dental parts can be significantly reduced. It is then possible to produce indications that were not available before, such as bridges for the lower jaw without disturbing visible connectors.
(38) Although the method steps described herein are presented in a certain order the skilled person will recognise that certain steps can be arranged in a different order without departing from the invention.