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Client Citation Analysis

Novel Antibacterial Resin Coating for Dental Provisional Crowns to Suppress Biofilms and Inhibit Secondary Caries

This study develops a DMADDM-modified UV resin coating for provisional crown composites and uses Dropometer-based sessile-drop contact angle testing to assess hydrophilicity of resin disk specimens and wetting behavior of uncured coating droplets.

At-a-Glance Summary

Primary surface measurement reported

The study reports water contact angle measurements on resin disk specimens and contact angle measurements of uncured UV resin-based coating droplets to evaluate hydrophilicity/wettability.

Dropometer attribution in the paper

Contact angles were measured using the contact angle measurement apparatus (Dropometer, Droplet Lab, Markham, ON, Canada), and uncured droplet contact angles were obtained using the Droplet Lab’s Sessile software (version 1.0.5.1) via the Young–Laplace equation.

How the surface-tension / contact-angle data were used in the study

Water contact angle results are used for wettability assessment across the Commercial Control, Experimental Control, and UV resin-coated groups with different DMADDM concentrations (Figure 2). Contact angle results for uncured UV resin-based samples are used to compare the hydrophilicity of uncured coating droplets across the experimental UV resin groups (Figure 3).

Replication / reliability statement

A total of 15 measurements were taken for the water contact angle assay, and uncured UV resin-based coating contact angles were analyzed with n = 15.

Paper Details

Title
Novel Antibacterial Resin Coating for Dental Provisional Crowns to Suppress Biofilms and Inhibit Secondary Caries
Authors
Ibrahim Ba-Armah; Mohammad Alenizy; Nader Almutairi; Heba Alqarni; Abdullah Alhussein; Radi Masri; Gary D. Hack; Thomas W. Oates; Jirun Sun; Michael D. Weir; Hockin H. K. Xu
Journal
Coatings
Year
2024
Volume
14
Pages / Article
1370
License
Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license

Journal context

What it is
Journal-level metrics for the publication venue (not a rating of this specific article).
How to read it
Compare metrics within category; updates are annual and lag current-year publications.

Scopus metrics (Elsevier / Scopus rating 2024)

CiteScore 2024

5.4

CiteScore subject ranks (CiteScore 2024)
  • Q2 - Surfaces, Coatings and Films (45/132)

Journal Impact Factor (Clarivate JCR)

Journal Impact Factor (JCR 2024)

2.8

5-Year Impact Factor

3.0

JCR category rank
  • Q2 - Physics, Applied
  • Q3 - Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
  • Q3 - Materials Science, Coatings and Films

What Was Measured

Primary surface / interfacial measurement

Contact angle (degrees) was measured to assess hydrophilicity: (1) water contact angle on resin disk specimens and (2) contact angle of uncured UV resin-based coating droplets applied onto a TEMPSMART resin disk surface.

Supporting measurements

The study also reports surface roughness (Ra) of specimens, SEM evaluation of resin-based coating thickness, and multiple biofilm/cell-based assays (e.g., CFU, metabolic activity via MTT, lactic acid production, live/dead staining, and SEM visualization of biofilms).

Role of the Dropometer

The Dropometer is used as a contact angle measurement apparatus to quantify surface hydrophilicity via sessile-drop testing in air. Water contact angle measurements were made by applying 5 µL deionized (DI) water droplets onto resin disks and evaluating the contact angle during a 10 s timeframe (15 measurements). For uncured UV resin-based coatings, a standard 3 µL droplet of each experimental UV resin group was applied onto the surface of the TEMPSMART resin disk and imaged after 10 s; contact angle values were obtained using Droplet Lab’s Sessile software (version 1.0.5.1) via the Young–Laplace equation.

In the study, the contact angle outputs are used to compare wettability/hydrophilicity between control and DMADDM-modified coating groups (cured disks) and to compare wetting behavior across uncured UV resin formulations.

Method Snapshot

Method Snapshot Table

Surface test series (Dropometer-derived output) Sample / system Groups compared (as labeled in paper) Droplet applied Volume Timing Output Instruments / analysis Conditions
Water contact angle (cured specimens) Resin disk specimens (TEMPSMART provisional crown composites; coated/uncoated) Commercial Control; Experimental Control; UV+ 2.5% DMADDM; UV+ 5% DMADDM; UV+ 7.5% DMADDM; UV+ 10% DMADDM DI water 5 µL Evaluated during a 10 s timeframe Water contact angle (°) contact angle measurement apparatus (Dropometer, Droplet Lab, Markham, ON, Canada) Sessile-drop technique in air
Contact angle (uncured coating droplets) Uncured UV resin droplet placed on TEMPSMART resin disk surface Five experimental groups of UV resin (reported in results as: Experimental Control; UV+ 2.5% DMADDM; UV+ 5% DMADDM; UV+ 7.5% DMADDM; UV+ 10% DMADDM) Uncured UV resin (droplet) 3 µL Image captured after 10 s Resin coating contact angle (°) Dropometer imaging; Droplet Lab’s Sessile software (version 1.0.5.1) using the Young–Laplace equation Contact angle measurement workflow described in Section 2.3

Key Findings

Water contact angle decreases at higher DMADDM concentrations (cured disks)

For wettability assessment (Figure 2; mean ± sd; n = 15), Commercial Control (70.5 ± 4.6°), Experimental Control (70 ± 6.8°), and UV+ 2.5% DMADDM (69.1 ± 7.6°) showed no significant differences among these three groups (p > 0.01). UV+ 5% DMADDM (54.7 ± 5.9°), UV+ 7.5% DMADDM (51.7 ± 7.6°), and UV+ 10% DMADDM (50.7 ± 8°) showed no significant differences among these three groups (p > 0.01), and there was a significant difference between the lower-concentration set and the higher-concentration set (p < 0.01).

Uncured UV resin droplet contact angles are similar across experimental groups

In Figure 3 (mean ± sd; n = 15), the uncured UV resin-based samples had contact angles of 26.84 ± 3.8° (Experimental Control), 26.48 ± 1.9° (UV+ 2.5% DMADDM), 26.70 ± 2.1° (UV+ 5% DMADDM), 27.95 ± 2.1° (UV+ 7.5% DMADDM), and 27.84 ± 1.5° (UV+ 10% DMADDM), with no significant difference between all groups (p > 0.01).

The paper frames contact angle as a qualitative hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity indicator

Water contact angles are described as a qualitative measure of surface hydrophobicity, with an angle below 65° demonstrating a surface that is more hydrophilic.

Authors connect hydrophilicity and wetting behavior to performance and application

The discussion states that while there was a significant difference in hydrophilicity between lower and higher concentrations of DMADDM, the overall hydrophilicity did not adversely impact the coating’s performance, and the antibacterial properties of DMADDM “seem to outweigh” potential increases in bacterial adhesion due to hydrophilicity. For uncured UV resin-based coatings, the paper states all coatings showed “excellent hydrophilicity,” and that increased wetting ability allows for “faster and easier application.”

Thresholds / Regimes

The paper provides a hydrophilicity criterion for interpreting water contact angles and uses a defined significance level for comparing contact angle datasets in Figures 2–3.

Figures & Visuals

Figure 2 — Water contact angle comparison across coating groups

What it shows

Shows representative water droplet images on samples and statistical comparisons of water contact angle (mean ± sd; n = 15) across Commercial Control, Experimental Control, and DMADDM-containing coating groups.

Figure 3 — Contact angle of uncured UV resin-based coating droplets

What it shows

Shows representative images and statistical analysis (mean ± sd; n = 15) of uncured resin coating droplet contact angles across the experimental UV resin groups.

Why It Matters

In the paper’s discussion, surface hydrophilicity (via water contact angle) is treated as a surface property that can influence bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation, which is central to the study’s goal of suppressing biofilms and inhibiting secondary caries on provisional crown materials.

Within that context, the Dropometer-generated contact angle data support the paper’s interpretation of how DMADDM concentration changes wettability of cured coated disks, and how uncured coating droplets wet the TEMPSMART resin disk surface in a way the authors describe as favorable for application.

Practical Takeaways

Dropometer workflow used for cured-surface wettability

Water contact angles were measured via the sessile-drop technique in air using 5 µL DI water droplets evaluated over a 10 s timeframe, with 15 measurements taken.

DMADDM concentration linked to lower water contact angle on cured disks

The paper reports higher-DMADDM coating groups with lower water contact angles (UV+ 5%, 7.5%, and 10% DMADDM) compared with Commercial Control / Experimental Control / UV+ 2.5% DMADDM, with a significant difference between these sets (p < 0.01).

Uncured coating droplet wetting assessed with Young–Laplace analysis

Uncured UV resin droplet contact angles were obtained from droplet images captured after 10 s and analyzed using Droplet Lab’s Sessile software (version 1.0.5.1) via the Young–Laplace equation.

Uncured droplet contact angles were statistically similar across formulations

The uncured UV resin droplet contact angles across Experimental Control and DMADDM-containing UV resin groups showed no significant difference between all groups (p > 0.01).

A hydrophilicity interpretation threshold is provided in the discussion

The paper notes that a water contact angle below 65° demonstrates a surface that is more hydrophilic, providing a criterion for qualitative interpretation of wettability.

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