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Sunday, March 31, 2013

Re: [ACEsthetics] Endo so skip if not interested

No, the ozonides are around for quite some time doing their thing.
 
Irrelevant completely if we're talking about oxygen inhibition, however.  The oily layer may be an issue if not removed.
 
bill domb
 
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2013 11:25 AM
Subject: Re: [ACEsthetics] Endo so skip if not interested
 
Thank you Bill. My comment was more concerning the ozone carrier, and not the ozone itself.
 
But your comment does raise the question: If oil is a more time-released form, might the oxidative properties of the oil become more relevant? Do the ozonoids in oils react and disappear just as quickly as the ozone in gas form or in aqueous?
 
Thanks for your insight.
--
David R. Boag, DDS
 


 
On Mar 31, 2013, at 12:11 PM, "William Domb" <wmdomb@verizon.net> wrote:

David is also right for those of us using resin sealers.  Any oxygen producing agent destroys the ability of the resin sealer to set, thus a failure. 
 
Maybe, but has not been observed by those using ozone in reality.  Probably because it reacts so rapidly that it disappears as a reactive entity before you get your sealer mixed.
 
 

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