Advanced ceramic material selection

Advanced Ceramic Materials for Technical Ceramic Components

Advanced ceramic materials are used when metals, plastics, or traditional ceramics cannot provide the required wear resistance, electrical insulation, thermal performance, corrosion resistance, dimensional stability, or high-temperature capability.

Great Ceramic helps engineers, OEM teams, and industrial buyers compare technical ceramics and select materials for custom ceramic components. We support parts made from alumina, zirconia, silicon carbide, silicon nitride, aluminum nitride, boron nitride, boron carbide, beryllium oxide, machinable glass ceramic, ZTA, SSIC, and other engineering ceramics selected for real operating conditions.

Definition

What Are Advanced Ceramic Materials?

Advanced ceramic materials, also called technical ceramics or engineering ceramics, are inorganic, non-metallic materials designed for demanding industrial and technical applications. Compared with traditional ceramics, they are selected for controlled properties such as hardness, wear resistance, electrical insulation, thermal conductivity, thermal shock behavior, corrosion resistance, and dimensional stability.

Common advanced ceramic material families include oxide ceramics, non-oxide ceramics, machinable ceramics, and composite or specialty ceramics. Each group has different strengths and limitations, so material selection should be matched to the part function rather than chosen by a single property.

테크니컬 세라믹

Functional ceramic materials selected for industrial performance rather than decorative use.

엔지니어링 세라믹

Materials reviewed around load, tolerance, geometry, surface finish, and manufacturability.

Industrial Ceramics

Components used in equipment, electronics, chemical processing, thermal systems, and precision assemblies.

Material families

Advanced Ceramic Material Families

Use this table to narrow the first material direction before reviewing grade, drawing, process route, and application conditions.

Material family Common materials Typical strengths Common design considerations Great Ceramic path
Oxide ceramics Alumina, zirconia, ZTA, beryllium oxide Electrical insulation, wear resistance, corrosion resistance, toughness options, thermal stability Brittleness, edge design, sintering shrinkage, machining cost after firing Compare alumina, zirconia, ZTA, and beryllium oxide
Non-oxide ceramics Silicon carbide, silicon nitride, boron nitride, boron carbide High-temperature performance, wear resistance, thermal shock resistance, thermal conductivity, non-wetting behavior depending on material Processing route, oxidation behavior, cost, machinability, joining method Review SiC, Si3N4, BN, and B4C options
가공 가능한 세라믹 Machinable glass ceramic, boron nitride grades Faster machining, prototype support, electrical insulation, thermal insulation in selected grades Lower strength than many fired ceramics, application temperature limits, edge strength Use for prototypes, insulation parts, fixtures, and low-volume precision parts
Composite and specialty ceramics ZTA, SSIC, metallized ceramics, ceramic-to-metal assemblies Property balance, joining support, wear or thermal performance tailored to application Requires review of material, process, tolerance, and assembly design together Use when one base ceramic does not meet all requirements

Selection table

Ceramic Material Selection by Requirement

The best material depends on the property that controls the failure risk or performance target. Use the table below as a starting point for a drawing review.

Requirement Materials often considered Why they may fit Questions to confirm
전기 절연 Alumina, aluminum nitride, boron nitride, machinable glass ceramic Strong insulation behavior with different thermal and machining profiles Voltage, dielectric requirement, temperature, geometry, surface finish
내마모성 Alumina, zirconia, silicon carbide, silicon nitride, boron carbide High hardness and good abrasion resistance compared with many metals Sliding wear or impact wear, load, mating material, lubrication, particles
Thermal management Aluminum nitride, beryllium oxide, silicon carbide, boron nitride Useful when heat transfer matters and electrical behavior must be controlled Thermal conductivity need, insulation need, heat source, assembly method
High temperature use Alumina, silicon carbide, silicon nitride, boron nitride, zirconia Different materials handle heat, thermal cycling, and atmosphere differently Maximum temperature, continuous or intermittent use, air/vacuum/inert gas, thermal shock
Chemical and corrosion resistance Alumina, silicon carbide, zirconia, selected boron nitride grades Useful in pumps, seals, nozzles, sleeves, and chemical equipment Chemical media, concentration, temperature, pressure, cleaning process
Toughness and mechanical load Zirconia, silicon nitride, ZTA Better fracture toughness or strength than many other ceramics Load direction, impact risk, wall thickness, sharp corners, assembly stress
Machinability and prototypes Machinable glass ceramic, boron nitride, green-machined or fired-machined ceramics Good for design trials, fixtures, and fast-turn precision parts Quantity, tolerance, final strength requirement, working temperature
Ceramic-to-metal joining Metallized alumina, metallized aluminum nitride, brazed assemblies Supports electrical, vacuum, feedthrough, and assembly requirements Metal type, braze area, leak requirement, thermal cycle, dimensional control

Material portfolio

Great Ceramic Material Portfolio

Use the material pages below to move from broad ceramic material selection into a specific custom component path.

알루미나 세라믹 - Al2O3 - 고급 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Widely used for electrical insulation, wear resistance, corrosion resistance, and industrial ceramic components such as tubes, rods, plates, substrates, sleeves, and spacers.

지르코니아 세라믹 - ZRO2 - 고급 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Often selected when a ceramic component needs higher toughness, good wear behavior, and strong mechanical performance.

실리콘 질화물 세라믹 - SI3N4 - 고급 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Combines high strength, thermal shock resistance, and good mechanical behavior for rollers, balls, pins, wear parts, and high-stress ceramic components.

질화 알루미늄 세라믹 - ALN - 고급 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Used where thermal conductivity and electrical insulation are required together, including substrates, heat spreaders, and power electronics parts.

실리콘 카바이드 세라믹 - SiC - 고급 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Considered for wear, corrosion, high-temperature, and thermal performance in seal rings, sleeves, nozzles, pump parts, and abrasive conditions.

질화 붕소 세라믹 - BN - 고급 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Selected for machinability, thermal shock behavior, insulation, and non-wetting behavior in selected molten metal or high-temperature environments.

베릴륨 산화물 세라믹 - BeO - 첨단 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Specialty ceramics may be considered where thermal conductivity, electrical insulation, or specific performance combinations are required.

MACOR 세라믹 - MGC - 고급 세라믹 - Great Ceramic

Useful for prototypes, fixtures, insulating parts, and precision components that benefit from machining without full fired-ceramic grinding routes.

신속한 세라믹 프로토타이핑 및 소량 생산

Review drawings, material requirements, tolerance needs, and manufacturing route options for custom ceramic components.

Design properties

Ceramic Material Properties That Matter for Design

Material data should be used as a selection tool, not as a guarantee for every geometry. Final part performance depends on material grade, forming method, firing or sintering, machining route, surface finish, edge design, and assembly stress.

  • Hardness and wear resistance.
  • Flexural strength and compressive strength.
  • Fracture toughness and impact sensitivity.
  • Density and weight.
  • Maximum service temperature.
  • Thermal conductivity.
  • Coefficient of thermal expansion.
  • Thermal shock resistance.
  • Volume resistivity and dielectric behavior.
  • Chemical resistance.
  • Machinability and achievable tolerance.
  • Surface finish and edge reliability.

Manufacturing review

From Material Selection to Custom Ceramic Components

After the material family is selected, the next step is manufacturability review. Advanced ceramic components often need different process routes than metal or plastic parts.

Great Ceramic can review material choice, drawing geometry, tolerance, green machining, fired machining, grinding, polishing, lapping, holes, slots, thin walls, surface finish, prototype needs, production needs, ceramic metallization, brazing, and ceramic-to-metal assembly requirements.

엔지니어링 세라믹 재료 성능 비교표

애플리케이션

적용 사례

Application need Common component examples Materials to review
전기 절연 Insulators, spacers, substrates, washers, sleeves Alumina, aluminum nitride, boron nitride, machinable glass ceramic
Wear and abrasion Guides, liners, plungers, sleeves, seal faces, nozzles Alumina, zirconia, silicon carbide, silicon nitride, boron carbide
Thermal management Substrates, heat spreaders, insulating thermal parts Aluminum nitride, beryllium oxide, silicon carbide, boron nitride
High temperature fixtures Setters, supports, nozzles, furnace and process parts Alumina, silicon carbide, boron nitride, zirconia, silicon nitride
Mechanical precision Pins, rollers, shafts, balls, positioning parts Zirconia, silicon nitride, alumina
화학 처리 Pump parts, valve parts, seal rings, tubes, sleeves Silicon carbide, alumina, zirconia
Ceramic-to-metal assembly Metallized rings, feedthrough parts, brazed assemblies Alumina, aluminum nitride, selected metallizable ceramics

RFQ checklist

What to Send for Material Selection

To help Great Ceramic review the correct technical ceramic material, send as much of the following information as possible.

RFQ input Why it matters
Drawing or sketch Confirms geometry, holes, edges, wall thickness, and tolerance
Target material if known Helps compare the requested material with practical alternatives
Operating temperature Determines high-temperature and thermal shock requirements
Electrical or thermal requirement Helps select insulation, dielectric, or thermal management materials
Wear, load, or pressure condition Helps evaluate hardness, toughness, strength, and fracture risk
Chemical exposure Helps select corrosion-resistant ceramics
Surface finish and tolerance Affects machining route, cost, and feasibility
Quantity and use stage Separates prototype, trial batch, and production planning
Assembly details Important for press fits, bonding, brazing, metallization, and mating parts

FAQ

Advanced Ceramic Materials FAQ

Advanced ceramic materials are engineered inorganic, non-metallic materials used for demanding industrial and technical applications. They are selected for properties such as wear resistance, electrical insulation, thermal performance, corrosion resistance, dimensional stability, and high-temperature capability.

The terms overlap. In industrial use, advanced ceramics, technical ceramics, and engineering ceramics usually refer to high-performance ceramic materials used in functional components rather than traditional pottery or decorative ceramics.

The best material depends on the operating condition. Alumina is often used for insulation and wear, zirconia for toughness and precision wear parts, silicon carbide for severe wear and corrosion, silicon nitride for mechanical strength and thermal shock, aluminum nitride for thermal management with insulation, and boron nitride for machinability and high-temperature insulation in selected applications.

Yes, but the machining route depends on the material and production stage. Some ceramics can be machined in a green or pre-fired state, while fired ceramics often require diamond grinding, polishing, lapping, or other precision ceramic machining methods.

Ceramics are strong in compression and often very hard, but they are also brittle compared with metals. A good material choice must consider load direction, sharp corners, thermal shock, surface finish, tolerance, assembly stress, and the real working environment.

Yes. Great Ceramic can review drawings, material requirements, operating conditions, tolerance needs, and manufacturing route options for custom ceramic components made from advanced ceramic materials.

Need help choosing an advanced ceramic material?

Send your drawing, working conditions, target material, tolerance, and quantity. Great Ceramic can review the application and recommend a practical material and manufacturing route for your custom technical ceramic component.