If you are designing a custom ceramic rod, tube, ring, washer, plate, shaft or insulating part, the material decision often matters more than the shape. The right ceramic grade can improve service life; the wrong grade can make a part expensive, fragile or difficult to finish.
When Alumina Ceramic Is Usually the Better Choice
Alumina ceramic, also written as Al2O3, is often the first material to consider for technical ceramic components. It offers good hardness, electrical insulation, temperature resistance and chemical stability at a practical cost.
- Electrical insulators, ceramic sleeves, spacer washers and insulating tubes.
- Wear plates, guide parts, ceramic pins, nozzles and fixtures.
- High-temperature supports and components that do not require high impact toughness.
- Parts where cost and stable batch production are important.
When Zirconia Ceramic Is Usually the Better Choice
Zirconia ceramic, also written as ZrO2 or YSZ, is usually selected when toughness and smooth wear behavior matter. Compared with alumina, zirconia can be less brittle and is often better for small precision parts that may see contact stress.
- Ceramic shafts, plungers, sleeves and guide parts with sliding contact.
- Seal rings, valve parts, pump components and wear-resistant precision parts.
- Small parts with thin walls, edges or holes where chipping risk needs attention.
- Applications where a polished surface and low friction are important.
Cost, Machining and Tolerance Considerations
For custom ceramic parts, price is not only material price. It also depends on forming method, green machining, sintering shrinkage, diamond grinding, polishing, inspection and quantity. Alumina is commonly more economical. Zirconia can cost more, but it may reduce failure risk in demanding wear parts.
Very tight tolerances should be discussed early. Ceramic parts shrink during sintering, and final precision dimensions are usually achieved by diamond grinding after firing. If only one surface is critical, the design can often be optimized to reduce cost.
How HERUN Helps With Material Selection
Many buyers do not know whether alumina or zirconia is correct. In that case, send the drawing, sample photo, working temperature, load, wear condition, chemical exposure and quantity. HERUN Ceramics can suggest a practical starting material and explain the trade-off.