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Zirconium dioxide is one of the most studied ceramic materials.
Zirconium dioxide ceramics are used in the manufacture of knives.
Some parts of nozzle are covered by zirconium dioxide for thermal protection.
Zirconium dioxide is also used as the solid electrolyte in electrochromic devices.
Zirconia alumina is a mixture of zirconium dioxide and aluminium oxide.
It uses new materials such as zirconium dioxide which is a superior insulator reducing current leakages.
Ion scattering spectroscopy studies of zirconium dioxide thin films prepared in-situ.
Her name is derived from the mineral Zirconium dioxide, which is often called Zirconia.
The most common oxide is zirconium dioxide, ZrO, also referred to as zirconia.
Although phases changes are common in ceramics under stress these usually result in toughening rather than failure (see Zirconium dioxide).
A special opaque agent (zirconium dioxide or barium sulphate) is added to the powder for radiographic contrast.
Some work has been done in Japan where uranium dioxide and zirconium dioxide was melted in a crucible before being added to water.
Zirconium dioxide is also harder than garnet sharpening stones and is nearly as hard as alumina.
One of them is zirconiated tungsten, where zirconium dioxide is used instead of thorium dioxide.
ZrCl is the most common precursor for chemical vapor deposition of zirconium dioxide and zirconium diboride.
Black silicon nitride ceramic is superior to white zirconium dioxide ceramic, since it is considerably harder and tougher.
CZ is the cubic crystalline form of zirconium dioxide and is often used a cheaper simulant for diamond. '
Zirconium from zircaloy, together with other metals, reacts with water and produces zirconium dioxide and hydrogen.
The zirconium dioxide, or zirconia, lambda sensor is based on a solid-state electrochemical fuel cell called the Nernst cell.
A ceramic knife is a knife made out of very hard and tough ceramic, often zirconium dioxide (ZrO; also known as zirconia).
Zirconium dioxide can also be doped with calcium oxide to give an oxide conductor that is used in oxygen sensors in automobile controls.
Zirconium forms a variety of inorganic and organometallic compounds such as zirconium dioxide and zirconocene dichloride, respectively.
Cubic zirconia (CZ) is the cubic crystalline form of zirconium dioxide (ZrO).
Zirconium dioxide (zirconia), which in pure form undergoes many phase changes between room temperature and practical sintering temperatures, can be chemically "stabilized" in several different forms.
Another high-performance glass contains high proportion of zirconium dioxide; however its high melting point requires use of platinum lined crucibles to prevent contamination with crucible material.