ForMatter/Materials/ceramic/Zirconia (Yttria-Stabilized Y-TZP)
mat_zirconia

Zirconia (Yttria-Stabilized Y-TZP)

advanced ceramic, stabilized zirconium dioxide, structural / dental / cutting-tool grade · zirconium dioxide, ZrO2, Y-TZP, yttria-stabilized zirconia, TZP, structural ceramic

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.

mechanical

  • density_kg_m36050
  • flexural_strength_mpa1000
  • fracture_toughness_mpa_m_half8.5
  • vickers_hardness_hv1250
  • youngs_modulus_gpa210
source: CoorsTek zirconia datasheet; ASTM C1421 fracture toughness test method; dental zirconia per ISO 6872

Sustainability

  • embodied carbon kg co2e per kg12.0
  • sourceEditorial estimate from ICE / Granta CES EduPack class data for advanced ceramics, cradle-to-gate. The high firing temperature and yttria precursor cost both contribute.
  • recyclabilitylow — outside standard recycling streams; specialized industrial recyclers exist for dental and electronics scrap
  • biodegradableFalse
  • certificationsISO 6872 (dental ceramic — biocompatibility, mechanical performance), ASTM F1873 (zirconia for surgical implants), USP Class VI (biocompatibility) for medical grades
  • localityglobal production by Tosoh (Japan — the dominant high-purity Y-TZP powder source), CoorsTek (US), Saint-Gobain (France), Kyocera (Japan); designer-quantity for hobby use rare; dental-CAM blanks via dental-supply distributors
visual
white to cream in sintered form, translucent in dental grades; reads as 'engineered ceramic' — too uniform to be natural
tactile
smooth and very cool to the touch; the highest thermal conductivity of common ceramics gives the cold hand; polished surfaces approach optical mirror
weight perception
very heavy for a ceramic — denser than steel per volume; surprises the hand
acoustic
a high clear ring when struck — the high modulus and low damping give zirconia a near-metallic acoustic signature

PBR starter values

finish · matte — open for table, JSON, host snippets, downloads

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
copy as JSON
{
  "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 Python
# 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 Python (lux)
# 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)
Substance pbrMetalRough
{
  "_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."
}
glTF 2.0 Metallic-Roughness
{
  "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
# 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
    }
}
↓ download glTF material

Second life

repairabilityvery low — fired zirconia is very hard, very brittle; replacement standard.
recyclabilityvery low — specialty technical-ceramic recyclers exist for high-value zirconia.
disposal pathspecialty technical-ceramic recycler.
typical longevity500 years (typical)
failure modes
  • catastrophic brittle fracture under impact (zirconia has higher toughness than alumina but is still brittle)
  • low-temperature degradation in humid steam (the canonical YSZ failure)
  • thermal-shock

ASTM C1421 zirconia technical literature; CoorsTek / Kyocera technical ceramics catalogs.

Citations