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Cork vs. Engineering Porcelain

Cork and engineering porcelain belong to fundamentally different material chemistries. Cork is a polymeric material, while engineering porcelain is ceramic. Therefore, their performance will be even more dissimilar than would be suggested by the difference in properties. There are 15 material properties with values for both materials. Properties with values for just one material (13, in this case) are not shown. Please note that the two materials have significantly dissimilar densities. This means that additional care is required when interpreting the data, because some material properties are based on units of mass, while others are based on units of area or volume.

For each property being compared, the top bar is cork and the bottom bar is engineering porcelain.

Metric UnitsUS Customary Units

Mechanical Properties

Compressive (Crushing) Strength, MPa 1.0
590
Elastic (Young's, Tensile) Modulus, GPa 0.020
67 to 150
Shear Modulus, GPa 0.010
34
Tensile Strength: Ultimate (UTS), MPa 0.85
130

Thermal Properties

Specific Heat Capacity, J/kg-K 2000
600 to 1000
Thermal Conductivity, W/m-K 0.040
1.8 to 6.5
Thermal Expansion, µm/m-K 200
2.0 to 6.6

Electrical Properties

Dielectric Strength (Breakdown Potential), kV/mm 1.5
11 to 25

Otherwise Unclassified Properties

Density, g/cm3 0.15
2.3 to 3.0

Common Calculations

Stiffness to Weight: Axial, points 0.074
16 to 29
Stiffness to Weight: Bending, points 60
49 to 65
Strength to Weight: Axial, points 1.6
12 to 16
Strength to Weight: Bending, points 13
19 to 25
Thermal Diffusivity, mm2/s 0.13
0.73 to 3.9
Thermal Shock Resistance, points 16
11 to 53