The effect of strontium oxide in glass–ionomer cements

[1]  S. Matsuya,et al.  IR and NMR Analyses of Hardening and Maturation of Glass-ionomer Cement , 1996, Journal of dental research.

[2]  U. Tewari,et al.  Modified polyalkenoate (glass-ionomer) cement--a study. , 1995, Journal of oral rehabilitation.

[3]  J. Nicholson,et al.  Effect of operator skill in determining the physical properties of glass-lonomer cements , 1994 .

[4]  E. A. Wasson Reinforced glass-ionomer cements--a review of properties and clinical use. , 1993, Clinical materials.

[5]  J. Williams,et al.  The comparative strengths of commercial glass-ionomer cements with and without metal additions , 1992, British Dental Journal.

[6]  J. Nicholson,et al.  Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopic Study of the Role of Tartaric Acid in Glass-ionomer Dental Cements , 1988, Journal of dentistry research.

[7]  Alan D. Wilson,et al.  Some structural aspects of glasses used in ionomer cements , 1988 .

[8]  M. Adediran Mesubi,et al.  An infrared study of zinc, cadmium, and lead salts of some fatty acids , 1982 .

[9]  Glen B. Deacon,et al.  Relationships between the carbon-oxygen stretching frequencies of carboxylato complexes and the type of carboxylate coordination , 1980 .

[10]  R. D. Shannon Revised effective ionic radii and systematic studies of interatomic distances in halides and chalcogenides , 1976 .

[11]  A. D. Wilson,et al.  Reactions in Glass Ionomer Cements: II. An Infrared Spectroscopic Study , 1974, Journal of dental research.

[12]  R. Hanna,et al.  Infrared Absorption Spectra of Sodium Silicate Glasses from 4 to 30μ , 1964 .

[13]  L. J. Bellamy The infra-red spectra of complex molecules , 1962 .