Abstract

PurposeTo evaluate the effect of firing temperature and heating rate on the volumetric shrinkage, translucency, flexural strength, hardness, and fracture toughness of a zirconia veneering ceramic. Material and methodsZirconia veneering ceramic specimens (N = 45) with varying final temperatures (730 °C, 750 °C, and 770 °C) and heating rates (70 °C/min, 55 °C/min, and 40 °C/min) were fabricated (n = 5). Each specimen's shrinkage, translucency, flexural strength, hardness, and fracture toughness were determined. Two-way analysis of variance, Scheffé test, and Pearson's correlation analysis were used to evaluate data (α = 0.05). ResultsThe shrinkage (44.9 ± 3.1–47.5 ± 1.6 vol%) and flexural strength (74.1 ± 17.4–107.0 ± 27.1 MPa) were not affected by tested parameters (P ≥ 0.288). The interaction between the main factors affected the translucency, hardness, and fracture toughness of the specimens (P ≤ 0.007). Specimens with 770 °C final temperature and 70 °C/min heating rate had the lowest (21.8 ± 3.2 %) translucency (P ≤ 0.039). The hardness ranged between 4.98 ± 0.51 GPa (730 °C; 70 °C/min) and 5.60 ± 0.37 GPa (770 °C; 70 °C/min). Fracture toughness ranged between 0.54 ± 0.04 MPa√m and 0.67 ± 0.08 MPa√m with the highest values for specimens fired at 730 °C with 70 °C/min (P ≤ 0.001). There was a positive correlation between translucency and hardness (r = 0.335, P = 0.012), and a negative correlation between fracture toughness and all parameters other than shrinkage (translucency: r = −0.693/P < 0.001, flexural strength: r = −0.258/P = 0.046, hardness: r = −0.457/P < 0.001). ConclusionsHeating rate and final temperature should be considered while fabricating veneered zirconia restorations with tested ceramic as they affected the translucency, hardness, and fracture toughness.

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