Abstract

This study aimed to find the ideal parameters for shaping waste zirconia powders from dental laboratories using the slip-casting process. Additionally, the qualities of ceramic products created in this manner were evaluated using microstructural characterization and physical-mechanical tests. Various dental laboratories provided the waste CAD/CAM zirconia powder used in the investigation. Wastes in powder form were first calcined. Afterward, an attritor mill was used to grind the grain size until it was usable, following the completion of the grain size distribution analysis. Waste and commercial zirconia powders were combined using various dispersants to create slip-casting slurries. The rheological characteristics of these slurries were then ascertained. By evaluating the rheological properties of slip-casting slurries prepared in this way, the most suitable casting parameters were determined, and ceramic products were formed by slip-casting technique from the slurries to be prepared in accordance with these parameters. The shaped samples were dried and sintered at two different temperatures, 1400-1450°C, and samples were designed for physical, mechanical, and microstructural characterization. The pore percentages, bulk densities, and water absorption of the sintered samples, according to Archimedes’ principle, as well as their strengths, were determined by the three-point bending strength test. Phase analysis was performed with XRD (X-ray diffractometer) microstructure studies with SEM (Scanning Electron Microscopy). It has been concluded that waste zirconia can be used in dental applications.

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