Definition
A hard, heat-resistant, non-metallic material made by shaping and then firing inorganic compounds (typically clays, oxides, or silicates) at high temperatures. In aircraft engines, ceramics are used as protective coatings and as components where extreme heat resistance, low thermal conductivity, and resistance to wear or corrosion are required — for example, on turbine blades, combustion liners, and certain spark plug insulators.
Plain English
A tough, heat-proof material — like the stuff fine china or kiln-fired pottery is made from — used in engines where metal alone wouldn't survive the heat.
Context Anchor
Seen in powerplant maintenance discussions of spark plug insulators, igniters, heat-resistant coatings, and engine parts exposed to high heat.
Derivation
From the Greek 'keramikos', meaning 'of pottery' or 'for pottery'. The original sense was simply baked clay. The aviation use carries the same core idea — a material hardened by high-temperature firing — but applied to engineered compounds designed to survive jet engine temperatures.
Why Pilots Care
Ceramic coatings on hot-section parts allow turbine engines to run at higher temperatures and last longer between overhauls. Spark plug ceramic insulators must remain intact to keep the ignition system working — a cracked ceramic insulator can cause a misfire or plug failure.
Intuition Check
Ceramic does not just mean a fragile plate or coffee mug. In aircraft maintenance, it means a hard, heat-resistant nonmetal material used where metal or plastic may not work well.
Example Sentence 1
The turbine blades had a thin ceramic coating to protect the metal underneath from the heat of the combustion gases.
Example Sentence 2
Technicians inspect ceramic coatings on turbine blades for cracks that could lead to engine failure.