Tools for dental work

Dentistry – Apparatus – Tool bit

Patent

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Details

51298, A61C 306

Patent

active

055098037

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to tools for dental work. It can be applied in one form to rotary tools used by dental technicians in shaping false teeth,and in another form to the drill bits used by dentists themselves.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Currently, dental technicians mostly use two kinds of rotary tool, each of which are made in many different shapes and sizes to cope with the complex shapes of teeth. The number of tools deemed necessary make it complicated and expensive to practise in this field. But also, the tools do not last. One kind has heads which are miniature grindstones, abrasive stone or grit bonded with resin being moulded onto the end of a stainless steel shank. But they tend soon to wear smooth or clog up and they are prone to overheating. It appears that, in the field, no-one has used resin bonded diamond grit which is theoretically the best and most long lasting abrasive. When it has been used, it has generally been adhered by nickel plating to the surface of a stainless steel shank. The problem again is that once the grit is dislodged or worn the tool is useless, and it tends to clog and generate heat. Sintered diamond heads (the diamonds being metal bonded in a mould) have also been tried, but they also clog and overheat.


OBJECT OF THE INVENTION

It is the aim of this invention to provide a tool capable of much longer life and relative coolness in operation, and where just a few rather than dozens wall generally give a sufficient range.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

According to the present invention there is provided a rotary tool for dental work comprising a shank carrying a head of diamond grit in a resin matrix, the shank having a diameter at the end opposite the head in accordance with the ISO standard for dental usage.
Currently, this standard specifies a diameter of 2.334-2.35 mm for dental tools used by technicians shaping false teeth. Their drive speed is usually in the range of 10,000 to 50,000 rpm. But a dentist, working on real teeth, has slightly smaller tools, and the standard currently specifies a diameter of 1.59 to 1.6 mm. The operating speed is of the order of 50,000 rpm.
It will generally be convenient to fix the abrasive head to a member of larger diameter than those quoted above, and so the portion that is engaged by the drive may be of reduced diameter compared with the end bearing the head. That end will preferably be knurled or otherwise roughened to afford a good grip for the resin, which serves also to bond the head to the shank.
The resin of the matrix is preferably a phenolic resin and in particular one in the resole group in which the formaldehyde to phenol ratio is greater than one, and usually in the range 1.2 to 3.5. A catalyst, in particular an acid, may be added to promote curing. To reduce the brittleness of such resin there may be other particulates besides the diamond grit, such as silicon carbide, aluminium oxide, silica flour, calcium oxide, graphite, molybdenum disulphide, PTFE, bronze, nickel and copper. Other additives may include silane, furfuraldehyde, phenolic resin adhesives and sulphur.
It is also envisaged that certain polyimide resins could be suitable.
The head can be moulded to various shapes. It can be used for grinding, shaping, characterising and profiling all the widely used dental materials including porcelain, enamel, non-precious metals, semi-precious metals, gold, crown and bridge acrylic, and ceramics. It is non-toxic, non-contaminating, non-clogging and stays cool in operation and sharp even though it does gradually wear away. Fresh diamond grit comes to the surface as the old is carried away with the surface layer of resin. Of course, this means that the head does gradually change shape, but that can be turned to advantage. The technician acquires a set of differently shaped and still efficient tools simply by using the basic original set, and so with steady replacement of the originals he can build up a large collection of considerable variety. In the same way, a dentist working on real teeth can a

REFERENCES:
patent: 2562587 (1951-07-01), Swearington
patent: 3142138 (1964-07-01), Kean et al.
patent: 4042347 (1977-08-01), Sioui
patent: 5273559 (1993-12-01), Hammar et al.

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