The white-to-cream high-strength ceramic of every modern dental crown (replacing the metal-and-porcelain crowns of 30 years ago), every premium kitchen-knife blade (Kyocera ceramic knives), every oxygen sensor in every car's exhaust system, every fuel-cell electrolyte. Zirconia is one of the small family of 'advanced ceramics' or 'engineering ceramics' — fine-grained sintered ceramic with mechanical strength approaching steel and hardness exceeding tool-steel, but with the brittleness profile of all ceramics (no plastic deformation; cracks propagate to fracture). The yttria stabilization is the engineered property — pure ZrO2 transforms between crystal phases as it cools, breaking itself apart from the volume change; doping with 3-8 mol percent yttria locks the high-temperature tetragonal phase as a metastable structure at room temperature, giving the bulk material the famous 'transformation toughening' behavior (a propagating crack tip triggers tetragonal-to-monoclinic transformation in the surrounding grains, the volume expansion of which compresses the crack tip and stops the propagation). The result is a ceramic that is ten times tougher than alumina, the canonical structural ceramic before zirconia. Buy from CoorsTek for industrial / dental quantities; specialty ceramic suppliers for hobby use.
Yttria-stabilized tetragonal zirconia polycrystal (Y-TZP), composition 3-8 mol percent Y2O3 in ZrO2. Density 6050 kg/m³ (one of the densest commercial ceramics). Flexural strength 800-1200 MPa (sintered, polished). Fracture toughness K1c 7-10 MPa·m^(1/2) — the 'transformation toughening' property; ~3x alumina. Vickers hardness 1200-1300 HV (harder than tool steel). Young's modulus 200-220 GPa. Service temperature 1000 °C continuous in air; transformation-instability concerns above 1100 °C. Ionic conductivity at 700-1000 °C makes Y-TZP the canonical solid-oxide-fuel-cell electrolyte and oxygen-sensor membrane material. Dental zirconia is typically a 3 mol percent Y-TZP grade with translucency engineering (multilayered shading from incisal-to-cervical for natural-looking crowns). Manufacturing: zirconia powder is uniaxially or isostatically pressed, then sintered at 1400-1500 °C for 2-4 hours; final geometry can be CAD/CAM milled in the green or pre-sintered state (the dental-CAD/CAM workflow) and then sintered to near-net shape. Polishes to optical-mirror finish. Cuts only by diamond grinding after sintering — too hard for ordinary cutting tools. Resin identification: not part of consumer recycling streams; industrial recycling exists for dental and oxygen-sensor scrap.
Principled BSDF defaults derived from the sphere matte finish. Reasonable seed for Blender, Substance, Keyshot, Rhino — tune per material. Or grab the whole library at once: ForMaterials library →
# finish: matte albedo #f0ece4 metallic 0.00 roughness 0.75 ior 1.45 transmission 0.00 clearcoat 0.00 sheen 0.00 anisotropic 0.00
{
"albedo": "#f0ece4",
"metallic": 0.0,
"roughness": 0.75,
"ior": 1.45,
"transmission": 0.0,
"clearcoat": 0.0,
"sheen": 0.0,
"anisotropic": 0.0
}
# Blender 4.x — Principled BSDF
# Zirconia (Yttria-Stabilized Y-TZP) · finish: matte
import bpy
mat = bpy.data.materials.new(name="mat_zirconia")
mat.use_nodes = True
bsdf = mat.node_tree.nodes["Principled BSDF"]
bsdf.inputs["Base Color"].default_value = (0.8714, 0.8388, 0.7758, 1.0)
bsdf.inputs["Metallic"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Roughness"].default_value = 0.750
bsdf.inputs["IOR"].default_value = 1.450
bsdf.inputs["Transmission Weight"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Coat Weight"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Sheen Weight"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Anisotropic"].default_value = 0.000
# KeyShot 11+ — lux Python API, Generic material
# Zirconia (Yttria-Stabilized Y-TZP) · finish: matte
# Run from Window → Scripting Console
import lux
mat = lux.createMaterial(name="mat_zirconia", materialType="Generic")
mat.setProperty("diffuse", (240, 236, 228)) # 8-bit sRGB
mat.setProperty("metallic", 0.000)
mat.setProperty("roughness", 0.750)
mat.setProperty("indexOfRefraction", 1.450)
mat.setProperty("transparency", 0.000)
mat.setProperty("coatingWeight", 0.000)
{
"_format": "Substance Designer / Painter \u2014 pbrMetalRough constants",
"_about": "Zirconia (Yttria-Stabilized Y-TZP) \u00b7 finish: matte",
"baseColor": {
"r": 0.8714,
"g": 0.8388,
"b": 0.7758
},
"metallic": 0.0,
"roughness": 0.75,
"ior": 1.45,
"opacity": 1.0,
"anisotropyLevel": 0.0,
"_notes": "Channels listed are the standard Substance pbrMetalRough output. Drop into a Uniform Color node per channel, or as the constant input on a layered stack."
}
{
"asset": {
"version": "2.0",
"generator": "ForMatter"
},
"materials": [
{
"name": "mat_zirconia",
"pbrMetallicRoughness": {
"baseColorFactor": [
0.8714,
0.8388,
0.7758,
1.0
],
"metallicFactor": 0.0,
"roughnessFactor": 0.75
},
"extensions": {
"KHR_materials_ior": {
"ior": 1.45
}
}
}
]
}
# USD Preview Surface — UsdShade.MaterialLook prim attributes
# Zirconia (Yttria-Stabilized Y-TZP) · finish: matte
def Material "mat_zirconia" {
token outputs:surface.connect = </mat_zirconia/PreviewSurface.outputs:surface>
def Shader "PreviewSurface" {
uniform token info:id = "UsdPreviewSurface"
color3f inputs:diffuseColor = (0.8714, 0.8388, 0.7758)
float inputs:metallic = 0.000
float inputs:roughness = 0.750
float inputs:ior = 1.450
float inputs:opacity = 1.000
float inputs:clearcoat = 0.000
token outputs:surface
}
}
ASTM C1421 zirconia technical literature; CoorsTek / Kyocera technical ceramics catalogs.
House vocabulary — terms ForMatter uses with intent.
Materials and processes for people who design and make things.
A local-first library of materials, processes, applications, and finishes — equal weight, citable everywhere, with cost-over-volume curves, trade-off profiles, equipment-tier filters, and second-life paths layered onto the data so a student can move from "what is this" toward "what's actually buildable here, now, by me." Part of the renato.design ecosystem — sibling of Plenum, Specimen, Ingenue, gesture, graf, and the Renato Rhino plug-ins. Form and matter, inseparable.
Half of teaching materials is teaching how the material is made into the thing. The standard subscription library was always light on that half. The wedge here isn't better samples or a prettier interface — it's treating Process as a peer entity, not a footnote.
Conway's Material World on raw materials, Lefteri's Making It on processes, Forty's Concrete and Culture, Sparke's Design in Context, Bürdek's Design: History, Theory and Practice of Product Design, Schröpfer's Material Design on materials in architecture, Winchester's The Perfectionists on tolerance, Minshall's Your Life Is Manufactured on the global supply chain, von Busch's Making Trouble on material activism, Were's How Materials Matter, Hegger / Drexler / Zeumer's Basics Materials, Untracht and McCreight on metalsmithing, USDA Forest Products Lab on woods, GIA on gemstones, Schott / CoorsTek / Toray / Owens Corning datasheets, MakeItFrom for verifiable property numbers, ASM Handbook, ISO standards. Museum holdings draw from the Met, MAD, V&A, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Newark Museum of Art, British Museum, Heard Museum, Smithsonian NMAI, Eiteljorg Museum, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Cranbrook Art Museum, and Grand Rapids Art Museum — collection-record permalinks only, designer overview pages and exhibition listings excluded. Voice blocks now ride on every entry kind — material, process, application, and finish — and include Ruskin on iron, Anni Albers on twining, Greg Lynn on the shred-and-teeth NURBS lineage, Pugin on the metal that won't be hammered, Barthes / Yanagi / Benjamin channeled within their philosophy; Sparke, Bürdek, Forty, Conway, Schröpfer, Minshall, von Busch, Lefteri, Pat Pruitt, Mary Lee Hu, Tom Joyce, Albert Paley, and the rest of the contemporary makers quoted verbatim with citation. All cited.
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