Across South American dental laboratories—particularly in Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Argentina—zirconia crown fracture after sintering remains a common challenge affecting restoration consistency and remakes. The issue is especially noticeable in full arch dental restorations and multi-unit bridge fabrication, where fractures often appear near connectors, margins, or stress-bearing areas.
In many cases, cracking is not caused by a single factor. Instead, it results from material selection, CAD design, milling conditions, and sintering compatibility working together. This article explores typical fracture cases and practical CAD/CAM optimization strategies.
Common Cases of Zirconia Crown Cracking
Case 1: Connector fractures in full arch bridges
Long-span restorations with thin connector areas are more vulnerable to thermal stress concentration during sintering.
Typical causes include:
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Poor connector design
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Inaccurate shrinkage compensation
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Material strength mismatch in posterior areas
For posterior regions, stronger zirconia support is usually required.
Case 2: Marginal chipping and microcracks
Minor cracks created during milling may expand after sintering.
Common causes include:
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Worn milling burs
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Inconsistent material structure
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Thin restoration margins
These issues frequently occur in precision crown fabrication.

How Material Properties Affect Sintering Stability
For zirconia full arch restorations, material performance strongly influences final outcomes.
Key technical indicators often include:
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Flexural strength of 700–1200 MPa
Supports different occlusal demands across anterior and posterior restorations.
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15-layer gradient structure
Helps simulate natural tooth transitions and improve stress distribution.
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43%–57% translucency gradient
Enhances natural appearance while maintaining multilayer aesthetics.
South American labs are increasingly evaluating sintering consistency, not just shade matching.

CAD/CAM Optimization Strategies
1. Improve bridge structural design
Avoid excessive cantilever length and maintain balanced connector thickness.
2. Match sintering profiles
Different zirconia systems require specific heating and cooling parameters.
3. Select multilayer zirconia
Gradient zirconia structures improve load distribution in full arch restorations.
4. Monitor milling bur condition
Tool wear can increase edge stress and trigger post-sintering crack expansion.
Industry Insight: New Trends in South American Dental Labs
As digital dentistry grows in South America, laboratories are shifting from focusing only on production speed to prioritizing material stability and long-term process consistency.
Conclusion
Zirconia crown cracking after sintering is usually the result of multiple interconnected factors, including material properties, design logic, and thermal processing. For full arch restorations, selecting multilayer zirconia with stable strength gradients and optimizing CAD/CAM workflows can help reduce fracture risks and improve restoration reliability.