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Injection Molding Materials
Choosing the wrong injection molding material may causes 23% of product failures. Fortunately, TwoWing Mold has rich manufacturing experience in material application, so this percentage can be further reduced.
We provides a full range of injection molding materials for production. You pick the materials, we craft masterpieces.
Material Basics
What Are Injection Molding Materials?
Plastic is a common material with polymer synthetic resin as its main component. They are plastic and fluid under certain temperatures and pressures, can be molded into specific shapes, and can maintain their shape under certain conditions. Most plastics can be injection molded, so injection molding materials are often referred to as those plastics that can be used in injection molding production.
Product designers need to rely on material properties to ensure design feasibility and performance. Injection molding engineers need to precisely regulate process parameters based on the thermal behavior of the material to optimize production. Mold designers need to design the mold structure with the material fluidity and shrinkage. Quality control personnel need to trace the root cause of the problem through material defect analysis.
First Mold’s mold and injection molding staff have more than 8 years of experience in plastics manufacturing and can fully understand our customers’ product requirements.
How Many Types?
Injection Molding Materials Classification
Injection molding materials are usually divided into the following 5 categories according to the scientific classification system:
- Commodity Thermoplastics (PP, PE, PS): Cost-effective solutions for high-volume applications
- Engineering Plastics (ABS, PC, Nylon, POM): Enhanced mechanical/thermal properties
- High-Performance Polymers (PEEK, PPS, PEI): Extreme temperature/chemical resistance
- Thermosetting Polymers(Epoxy, Silicone): - Irreversible curing for electrical insulation
- Modified Compounds: Custom blends with additives (e.g. glass-filled nylon)
Future innovations include modified plastics more customized for diverse performance requirements. Developed to make it easy for you to always find the most appropriate choice for your project, the categories cover durability, heat resistance, flexibility and eco-friendly options among other features.
- Injection Molding of Common Materials in Factories
High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE), Low-Density Polyethylene (LDPE), and Linear Low-Density Polyethylene (LLDPE).
PE Injection Molding
Both Homopolymer and Copolymer types.
PP Injection Molding
General Purpose Polystyrene (GPPS) and High Impact Polystyrene (HIPS).
PS Injection Molding
Clarity and resistance to UV light
PMMA Injection Molding
Rigid PVC and Flexible PVC
PVC Injection Molding
High-flow and flame-retardant grades
ABS Injection Molding
Standard, UV-stabilized, and flame-retardant varieties
PC Injection Molding
PA6, PA66, and specialty grades like PA12 for flexibility.
PA Injection Molding
Copolymer and homopolymer grades.
POM Injection Molding
Electrical properties and chemical resistance
PBT Injection Molding
Glass-filled and carbon-filled grades for enhanced mechanical properties
PEEK Injection Molding
High heat resistance and strength
PEI Injection Molding
Available in virgin and reinforced grades for increased strength
PPS Injection Molding
Ranging from soft and flexible to hard and rigid grades.
TPU Injection Molding
For increased mechanical strength and thermal resistance.
Modified Plastic Molding
The Core Characteristics & Applications
We sincerely hope that you can have a deeper understanding of injection molding materials, as this will be greatly beneficial for your product design. In fact, many of our clients have varying degrees of understanding of plastic materials, and a small portion of them even specify particular material suppliers for us to purchase from. We highly encourage you to do this. At the same time, we can also provide various purchase verifications and material testing certifications.
| Material | Core Characteristics | Typical Applications | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| PP | Excellent chemical resistance and electrical insulation; low density with good fatigue resistance. | Food containers, living hinges, medical disposables, automotive bumpers, toy parts | Low |
| HDPE | High impact strength and moisture resistance; suitable for thin-walled designs due to high flowability. | Bottle caps, chemical tanks, cutting boards, playground equipment | Low |
| LDPE | Superior flexibility and transparency; low-temperature toughness but prone to stress cracking. | Squeeze bottles, packaging films, wire insulation, labware | Low |
| PS (GPPS) | Crystal-clear transparency and rigidity; brittle under impact and degraded by UV exposure. | CD cases, disposable cutlery, display stands, test tubes | Low |
| PS (HIPS) | Improved impact strength with opaque appearance; easily painted but poor solvent resistance. | Refrigerator liners, electronic housings, point-of-sale displays | Low |
| PVC (rigid) | High stiffness and flame retardancy (self-extinguishing); releases HCl gas if overheated (>180°C). | Pipes, window profiles, credit cards, blister packs | Low |
| PVC (flexible) | Softened with plasticizers for rubber-like elasticity; loses flexibility over time due to migration. | Medical tubing, cables insulation, inflatable products, synthetic leather | Low |
| PP+40%Talc | 20% higher HDT (130°C) and low thermal expansion; reduces cycle time but increases part weight. | Automotive dashboards, heater housings, white goods bases | Low |
| Food-Grade PE | FDA-compliant with <50ppm extractables; pigments must avoid heavy metals (Cd/Pb). | Milk jugs, cutting boards, reusable food storage boxes | Low |
| Material | Core Characteristics | Typical Applications | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| ABS | Balanced toughness, gloss, and dimensional stability; easily electroplated but susceptible to UV degradation. | LEGO bricks, power tool housings, automotive grilles, keyboard keys | Medium |
| PC | Exceptional impact strength (bullet-resistant grade) and optical clarity; prone to stress cracking in solvents. | Safety goggles, LED lamp covers, riot shields, medical device housings | Medium |
| POM (Acetal) | Extreme stiffness and low friction coefficient; excellent creep resistance but sensitive to acid hydrolysis. | Precision gears, zippers, fuel system components, aerosol valves | Medium |
| PA6 (Nylon 6) | High abrasion resistance and elasticity; absorbs 8-10% moisture causing dimensional shifts. | Fishing lines, textile machinery parts, skate wheels, industrial rollers | Medium |
| PA66 (Nylon 66) | Higher melting point (260°C) and tensile strength vs. PA6; moisture absorption leads to strength loss. | Automotive fan blades, electrical connectors, conveyor belts, power tool gears | Medium |
| PBT | Fast crystallization enabling rapid cycling; good electrical stability but attacked by strong bases. | Switches, socket housings, vehicle headlight bezels, pump impellers | Medium |
| PET | High barrier properties against CO₂/O₂; requires drying to prevent hydrolysis during processing. | Beverage bottles, food trays, synthetic fibers, insulating tapes | Medium |
| PMMA | Optical clarity >92% light transmission and UV stability; scratches easily and brittle under load. | Aquarium windows, signage, taillight lenses, cosmetic displays | Medium |
| TPE (SBS) | Thermoplastic rubber with soft touch (Shore 30A-90A); recyclable but limited to 80°C service. | Toothbrush grips, shoe soles, seals for electronics, sports equipment handles | Medium |
| TPU | Outstanding abrasion resistance (10x better than rubber) and oil tolerance; hard to demold due to adhesion. | Hydraulic hoses, phone cases, athletic shoe soles, industrial drive belts | Medium |
| ABS+PC | Combines PC’s heat resistance with ABS’s processability; prone to stress whitening under impact. | Laptop housings, drone frames, power drill bodies, motorcycle helmets | Medium |
| TPE+PP (Overmold) | Adhesion to PP without primers; Shore hardness 50A-95A for soft-touch grips. | Tool handles, medical device buttons, steering wheel covers | Medium |
| Conductive PP | Carbon-black filler provides 10³ Ω·cm resistivity; reduces impact strength by 60% vs. standard PP. | EMI housings, antistatic pallets, fuel sensor components | Medium |
| Flame-Retardant ABS | UL94 V-0 rating via brominated additives; limited to 90°C due to stabilizer decomposition. | Power strips, transformer cases, server enclosures | Medium |
| Foamed PE | Structural foam reduces weight 20% and sink marks; rough surface requires finishing7. | Buoyancy aids, floating docks, lightweight pallets | Medium |
| Material | Core Characteristics | Typical Applications | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Silicone (LSR) | Biocompatible and stable from -50°C to 230°C; requires platinum-cure system and specialized equipment. | Medical implants, baby bottle nipples, high-temp gaskets, aerospace seals | High |
| PPS | Inherently flame retardant (UL94 V-0) and chemically inert; brittle and requires high mold temperatures. | Fuel system sensors, industrial pump housings, coil bobbins, oven knobs | High |
| PPO (Modified) | Low moisture absorption (<0.1%) and stable dielectric properties; blends with PS to improve processability. | Water meters, automotive instrument clusters, dishwasher components | High |
| PA12 | Low moisture absorption (1.5%) vs. PA6/66; resists cracking when exposed to salts and greases. | Cable sheathing, pneumatic tubing, ski boots, 3D printing powders | High |
| PVDF | Piezoelectric properties and gamma radiation resistance; difficult to bond due to low surface energy. | Lithium-ion battery binders, wire insulation in nuclear plants, water filtration membranes | High |
| PA+30%GF | 50% higher stiffness and 40% lower moisture absorption vs. pure PA; abrasive to molds1. | Automotive radiator end caps, drone arms, bicycle cranks, industrial gear wheels | High |
| PBT+30%GF | Reduced warpage and 4x creep resistance vs. unfilled PBT; surface fibers require coating for aesthetics. | Motor commutators, circuit breakers, laser printer fuser units | High |
| PC+10%PTFE | Low friction (μ=0.15) and self-lubricating; reduced tensile strength by 30% vs. virgin PC. | Bearing cages, sliding guides, copier roller bushings | High |
| POM+25%GF | Doubled flexural modulus and reduced shrinkage to 0.8%; delamination risk if poorly bonded. | Watch mechanisms, gear pumps, camera module carriers | High |
| Silicone+PC (2-Shot) | Chemical bond enables seals in medical devices; requires sequential molding10. | IV connectors, respiratory masks, waterproof switch seals | High |
| Medical PC | ISO 10993 compliance and gamma radiation stable; requires cleanroom molding. | Dialysis filters, blood centrifuge bowls, surgical staplers | High |
| Clear TPU | 90% light transmission with anti-yellowing additives; scratches at pencil hardness B. | AR/VR lens covers, optical fiber coatings, dive mask skirts | High |
| PSU | Clarity and steam sterilization (50+ cycles); attacked by chlorinated solvents. | Coffee dispenser parts, endoscope components, steam wand nozzles | High |
| Material | Core Characteristics | Typical Applications | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| PEEK | Retains strength at 260°C continuous use; sterilizable via autoclave and resists hydrolysis in steam. | Spinal implants, semiconductor wafer carriers, drone motor mounts, oil drill valves | Very High |
| PEI (Ultem) | High dielectric strength and low smoke emission; dissolves in chlorinated solvents like dichloromethane. | Aircraft interior panels, sterilizable surgical tools, microwave components | Very High |
| PTFE (filled) | Lowest coefficient of friction (0.05-0.10) among plastics; processed via sintering, not injection molding. | Non-stick cookware coatings, chemical labware liners, high-frequency insulators | Very High |
| PPSU | Transparent amber material with autoclavability (200+ cycles); softens in ketones like acetone. | Dental instrument handles, sterilization trays, aircraft window frames | Very High |
| LCP | Self-reinforcing fibers provide anisotropic strength; near-zero warp but weak weld lines. | Miniature connectors, surgical device components, satellite antenna mounts | Very High |
| PEEK+30%CF | Thermal conductivity comparable to aluminum; electrical conductivity requires EMI shielding. | Spinal implants, drone motor controllers, Formula 1 brake pistons | Very High |
| Glass-Filled PPS | 0.02% creep strain at 200°C/1000hr; mold temperatures >140°C needed for surface finish. | Turbocharger housings, EGR valves, industrial oven handles | Very High |
| Material | Core Characteristics | Typical Applications | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| PP | Excellent chemical resistance and electrical insulation; low density with good fatigue resistance. | Food containers, living hinges, medical disposables, automotive bumpers, toy parts | Low |
| HDPE | High impact strength and moisture resistance; suitable for thin-walled designs due to high flowability. | Bottle caps, chemical tanks, cutting boards, playground equipment | Low |
| LDPE | Superior flexibility and transparency; low-temperature toughness but prone to stress cracking. | Squeeze bottles, packaging films, wire insulation, labware | Low |
| PS (GPPS) | Crystal-clear transparency and rigidity; brittle under impact and degraded by UV exposure. | CD cases, disposable cutlery, display stands, test tubes | Low |
| PS (HIPS) | Improved impact strength with opaque appearance; easily painted but poor solvent resistance. | Refrigerator liners, electronic housings, point-of-sale displays | Low |
| PVC (rigid) | High stiffness and flame retardancy (self-extinguishing); releases HCl gas if overheated (>180°C). | Pipes, window profiles, credit cards, blister packs | Low |
| PVC (flexible) | Softened with plasticizers for rubber-like elasticity; loses flexibility over time due to migration. | Medical tubing, cables insulation, inflatable products, synthetic leather | Low |
| ABS | Balanced toughness, gloss, and dimensional stability; easily electroplated but susceptible to UV degradation. | LEGO bricks, power tool housings, automotive grilles, keyboard keys | Medium |
| PC | Exceptional impact strength (bullet-resistant grade) and optical clarity; prone to stress cracking in solvents. | Safety goggles, LED lamp covers, riot shields, medical device housings | Medium |
| POM (Acetal) | Extreme stiffness and low friction coefficient; excellent creep resistance but sensitive to acid hydrolysis. | Precision gears, zippers, fuel system components, aerosol valves | Medium |
| PA6 (Nylon 6) | High abrasion resistance and elasticity; absorbs 8-10% moisture causing dimensional shifts. | Fishing lines, textile machinery parts, skate wheels, industrial rollers | Medium |
| PA66 (Nylon 66) | Higher melting point (260°C) and tensile strength vs. PA6; moisture absorption leads to strength loss. | Automotive fan blades, electrical connectors, conveyor belts, power tool gears | Medium |
| PBT | Fast crystallization enabling rapid cycling; good electrical stability but attacked by strong bases. | Switches, socket housings, vehicle headlight bezels, pump impellers | Medium |
| PET | High barrier properties against CO₂/O₂; requires drying to prevent hydrolysis during processing. | Beverage bottles, food trays, synthetic fibers, insulating tapes | Medium |
| PMMA | Optical clarity >92% light transmission and UV stability; scratches easily and brittle under load. | Aquarium windows, signage, taillight lenses, cosmetic displays | Medium |
| TPE (SBS) | Thermoplastic rubber with soft touch (Shore 30A-90A); recyclable but limited to 80°C service. | Toothbrush grips, shoe soles, seals for electronics, sports equipment handles | Medium |
| TPU | Outstanding abrasion resistance (10x better than rubber) and oil tolerance; hard to demold due to adhesion. | Hydraulic hoses, phone cases, athletic shoe soles, industrial drive belts | Medium |
| Silicone (LSR) | Biocompatible and stable from -50°C to 230°C; requires platinum-cure system and specialized equipment. | Medical implants, baby bottle nipples, high-temp gaskets, aerospace seals | High |
| PEEK | Retains strength at 260°C continuous use; sterilizable via autoclave and resists hydrolysis in steam. | Spinal implants, semiconductor wafer carriers, drone motor mounts, oil drill valves | Very High |
| PPS | Inherently flame retardant (UL94 V-0) and chemically inert; brittle and requires high mold temperatures. | Fuel system sensors, industrial pump housings, coil bobbins, oven knobs | High |
| PEI (Ultem) | High dielectric strength and low smoke emission; dissolves in chlorinated solvents like dichloromethane. | Aircraft interior panels, sterilizable surgical tools, microwave components | Very High |
| PPO (Modified) | Low moisture absorption (<0.1%) and stable dielectric properties; blends with PS to improve processability. | Water meters, automotive instrument clusters, dishwasher components | High |
| PA12 | Low moisture absorption (1.5%) vs. PA6/66; resists cracking when exposed to salts and greases. | Cable sheathing, pneumatic tubing, ski boots, 3D printing powders | High |
| PTFE (filled) | Lowest coefficient of friction (0.05-0.10) among plastics; processed via sintering, not injection molding. | Non-stick cookware coatings, chemical labware liners, high-frequency insulators | Very High |
| PPSU | Transparent amber material with autoclavability (200+ cycles); softens in ketones like acetone. | Dental instrument handles, sterilization trays, aircraft window frames | Very High |
| LCP | Self-reinforcing fibers provide anisotropic strength; near-zero warp but weak weld lines. | Miniature connectors, surgical device components, satellite antenna mounts | Very High |
| PVDF | Piezoelectric properties and gamma radiation resistance; difficult to bond due to low surface energy. | Lithium-ion battery binders, wire insulation in nuclear plants, water filtration membranes | High |
| ABS+PC | Combines PC’s heat resistance with ABS’s processability; prone to stress whitening under impact. | Laptop housings, drone frames, power drill bodies, motorcycle helmets | Medium |
| PA+30%GF | 50% higher stiffness and 40% lower moisture absorption vs. pure PA; abrasive to molds1. | Automotive radiator end caps, drone arms, bicycle cranks, industrial gear wheels | High |
| PBT+30%GF | Reduced warpage and 4x creep resistance vs. unfilled PBT; surface fibers require coating for aesthetics. | Motor commutators, circuit breakers, laser printer fuser units | High |
| PP+40%Talc | 20% higher HDT (130°C) and low thermal expansion; reduces cycle time but increases part weight. | Automotive dashboards, heater housings, white goods bases | Low |
| PC+10%PTFE | Low friction (μ=0.15) and self-lubricating; reduced tensile strength by 30% vs. virgin PC. | Bearing cages, sliding guides, copier roller bushings | High |
| POM+25%GF | Doubled flexural modulus and reduced shrinkage to 0.8%; delamination risk if poorly bonded. | Watch mechanisms, gear pumps, camera module carriers | High |
| PEEK+30%CF | Thermal conductivity comparable to aluminum; electrical conductivity requires EMI shielding. | Spinal implants, drone motor controllers, Formula 1 brake pistons | Very High |
| TPE+PP (Overmold) | Adhesion to PP without primers; Shore hardness 50A-95A for soft-touch grips. | Tool handles, medical device buttons, steering wheel covers | Medium |
| Silicone+PC (2-Shot) | Chemical bond enables seals in medical devices; requires sequential molding10. | IV connectors, respiratory masks, waterproof switch seals | High |
| Conductive PP | Carbon-black filler provides 10³ Ω·cm resistivity; reduces impact strength by 60% vs. standard PP. | EMI housings, antistatic pallets, fuel sensor components | Medium |
| Flame-Retardant ABS | UL94 V-0 rating via brominated additives; limited to 90°C due to stabilizer decomposition. | Power strips, transformer cases, server enclosures | Medium |
| Medical PC | ISO 10993 compliance and gamma radiation stable; requires cleanroom molding. | Dialysis filters, blood centrifuge bowls, surgical staplers | High |
| Food-Grade PE | FDA-compliant with <50ppm extractables; pigments must avoid heavy metals (Cd/Pb). | Milk jugs, cutting boards, reusable food storage boxes | Low |
| Glass-Filled PPS | 0.02% creep strain at 200°C/1000hr; mold temperatures >140°C needed for surface finish. | Turbocharger housings, EGR valves, industrial oven handles | Very High |
| Clear TPU | 90% light transmission with anti-yellowing additives; scratches at pencil hardness B. | AR/VR lens covers, optical fiber coatings, dive mask skirts | High |
| Foamed PE | Structural foam reduces weight 20% and sink marks; rough surface requires finishing7. | Buoyancy aids, floating docks, lightweight pallets | Medium |
| PSU | Clarity and steam sterilization (50+ cycles); attacked by chlorinated solvents. | Coffee dispenser parts, endoscope components, steam wand nozzles | High |
How to Choose the Right Injection Molding Material for Your Product?
For most established products like water bottles or electronic device casings, material choices usually follow industry norms. For example, PP plastic works well for containers because it resists chemicals. ABS plastic, on the other hand, is good for consumer electronics casings. It balances strength and looks nicely. These material picks have stood the test of time, backed by decades of manufacturing experience.
But your product might not be one of those common items. Or maybe it’s an innovation based on an established product. In those cases, you’ll need to choose materials. There are several factors you’ll have to weigh:
Total Cost Analysis
Material cost per kg plus processing expenses and tooling impact.
Functional Performance
Mechanical, thermal, and electrical material properties required for product operation.
Environmental Resistance
Resistance to chemicals, UV, moisture, or extreme temperature conditions.
Manufacturing Feasibility
Injection molding process compatibility including flow behavior and cooling rates.
Aesthetic Requirements
Surface finish quality, color stability, and optical clarity characteristics.
Regulatory Compliance
Certifications for food-grade, medical, or flame-retardant plastics.
How to cut through the complexity? Start by answering serveral critical questions every designer asks:
How much will my project really cost?
To answer this question, you need to first clarify the cost structure of injection molding production and address the question of how material selection affects each cost element.
What are the main cost components of injection molding?
| Cost Component | Percentage Range | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Raw Material Costs | 40-60% | Includes base resin prices (subject to crude oil fluctuations) and costs of modifying additives (flame retardants, glass fibers, etc.). |
| Processing Costs | 20-35% | Includes equipment energy consumption, molding cycle time, and scrap losses. |
| Mold Costs | 15-25% | Includes initial investment, maintenance costs, and life cycle expenses. |
| Post-Processing Costs | 5-20% | Includes surface treatments, assembly difficulty, and testing and certification fees. |
How Material Selection Impacts Project Costs
| Cost Type | Material Impact Mechanism | Optimization Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Raw Material Cost | Significant price gaps exist between specialty plastics and commodity resins. | Apply the “fit-for-purpose” principle – avoid overspecification |
| Processing Cost | Material flowability directly affects cycle time – high MFI materials can reduce production time by 30%. | Prioritize high-flow grades for thin-wall designs |
| Mold Cost | Reinforced materials accelerate mold wear by 3x, shortening tool life. | Use hardened tool steel or surface coatings |
| Post-Processing Cost | Material properties determine secondary operations. | Select functionally integrated materials |
How can I make my product look better?
Once costs are confirmed as feasible, designers will likely turn their attention to a product’s visual appeal. Choosing the right injection molding material means considering how well it can achieve the desired look. This usually ties to the surface treatments applied after injection molding. Common plastic surface treatment options include:
| Processing Technology | Applicable Materials | Effect Characteristics | Cost Coefficient | Design Case Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In-Mold Decoration (IMD) | ABS, PC, PMMA | 3D graphics/text embedding, seamless touch control | ★★★☆ | Automotive center console panel |
| Painting | General plastics | High gloss/matte finish, gradient colors | ★★☆ | Appliance housing |
| NCVM Vacuum Plating | PC, PC/ABS | Metallic texture + signal transparency | ★★★☆ | Mobile phone antenna cover |
| Electroplating/Vacuum Plating | Electroplating-grade ABS | Mirror chrome/gold effect | ★★★★ | Bathroom faucet trim |
| Hydrographics/Heat Transfer | Parts with complex curvature | Wood grain/marble/camouflage imitation, seamless curved surface coverage | ★★☆ | Gun stock, helmet |
| Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) | Engineering plastics (PA, POM) | Nanoscale hard coatings (AlCrN, TiN), high hardness | ★★★★ | Wear-resistant gears |
| Laser Engraving | Glass fiber reinforced plastics, dark plastics | Permanent black/white marking, micro-hole engraving | ★☆☆ | Medical device labeling |
| Texture Etching | PP, ABS, TPE | Leather/grain patterns, geometric etching, anti-slip | ★☆☆ | Tool handle |
| Plasma Treatment | Non-polar plastics (PP, PE, etc.) | Increased surface energy (up to 72mN/m), enhanced adhesion | ★★☆ | Headlight bonding prep |
| Surface Activation Pretreatment | Hard-to-bond plastics (PP, PTFE) | Generates polar groups (hydroxyl/carboxyl), chemical modification | ★☆☆ | PTFE bonding |
| Anti-fingerprint/Anti-fouling Coating | Touchscreen panels (PC, PMMA) | Hydrophobic angle >110°, wear-resistant (5000+ cycles) | ★★☆ | Medical touch screen |
| IMR Film Transfer | Flat/shallow curved parts | Scratch-resistant patterns (100k+ cycles), batch color change capability | ★★★☆ | Keyboard keys |
FAQ on Injection Molding Materials
What are the most cost-effective plastics for high-volume production?
Choosing low-cost plastics needs to match the application scenario. HDPE, PP, and PET are the most cost-effective in traditional fields. Starch-based plastics and PBS have the greatest potential in policy-driven biodegradable markets, especially when their costs are further reduced through blending or large-scale production.
How do I choose between engineering plastics like ABS, PC, and nylon?
If you need good all-around performance, easy processing, and relatively low cost—especially for casings, consumer goods, or car interior parts that require a nice finish and stable dimensions—ABS is usually a good choice.
If you need extremely high impact strength, transparency, or excellent heat distortion resistance—think safety gear, clear covers, or heat-resistant electronic casings—PC works better.
Nylon is the top pick when your application needs high wear resistance, strong mechanical strength, heat resistance, or good self-lubrication. This includes gears, bearings, moving parts, or heat-resistant components near engines.
The final choice between the three depends on a mix of factors. These include mechanical properties, heat performance, chemical resistance, cost, processing difficulty, and whether special modifications (like reinforcement or flame resistance) are needed.
What plastic materials maintain performance in extreme temperatures?
PBI is one type of plastic that maintains performance in extreme temperatures. It stays stable at high temperatures of 300-370°C for long periods. What’s more, it doesn’t break down at 538°C and has high strength.
PEI can work at 170°C for a long time and handle short bursts of 510°C. It also has important properties like resistance to water damage and radiation.
PEEK keeps its mechanical properties stable at 260°C and can handle temperatures over 300°C for short times. It works well in high-temperature fatigue environments.
PI handles a wide temperature range, from -240°C to 290°C, and can even take 480°C for short periods.
PTFE stays chemically inert with low friction between -196°C and 260°C. It remains stable at 280°C for short times too.
UHMWPE keeps its impact resistance even in liquid nitrogen at -269°C. TPU stays elastic at its brittle point of -60°C and retains over 90% of its elasticity at -40°C.
All these materials balance performance in extreme temperatures through molecular designs, such as rigid aromatic ring chains and fluorine atom shielding.
Can I achieve both aesthetics and durability in outdoor products?
In outdoor product design, injection-molded materials can achieve both aesthetics and durability. For example, you can choose weather-resistant resins, like ASA or PC/ABS with UV-resistant additives, to ensure colors stay bright and don’t fade. At the same time, you can ask injection molding factories to use two-color injection molding or textured mold technology to create complex surface effects. This lets the product keep its inherent impact resistance, corrosion resistance, and stability across a wide temperature range (-40°C to 120°C). It’s not too hard for outdoor products to maintain both functional and visual quality over time, even in long-term exposure to sun and rain.
What certifications should I verify for medical device materials?
When looking for injection molding suppliers for medical devices, you must check if they have ISO 13485 certification for medical device quality management systems. This system is a core standard. It ensures product design, production and services meet global medical device regulations.
What’s more, depending on your country or region, you may need to confirm if the medical parts produced by the supplier have FDA certification (for the U.S. market) or CE certification (for the European market). This is because some regional regulations have mandatory requirements for safety and effectiveness.
You can also check if the supplier holds medical device registration certificates and China Compulsory Certification (CCC) based on your own needs.
How does material selection impact mold design complexity?
Material properties like flowability, shrinkage rate and thermal stability directly affect how complex a mold’s structure needs to be. High-viscosity materials, such as PC, require higher injection pressure and precise venting designs. Low-shrinkage materials, like PPS, allow for smaller draft angles but demand mold steel that resists wear. Glass fiber-reinforced materials force molds to use cemented carbide. They also need optimized runners to prevent uneven fiber orientation. Crystalline materials, such as PEEK, have strict temperature control needs. This makes designing the mold’s cooling system much harder. Choosing a material is essentially a balance between mold cost and molding precision.
What are the tradeoffs when using reinforced plastics?
When designing products, you must balance improved mechanical performance with processing challenges when choosing reinforced plastics. A high glass fiber content in reinforced plastics significantly boosts strength and heat resistance, but it also speeds up mold wear and may cause fiber floating on the surface. The reduced flowability of the material requires higher injection pressure and limits thin-wall designs. Anisotropic shrinkage can lead to dimensional deviations, which need to be compensated for through structural optimization. Higher raw material costs and greater difficulty in recycling also need to be included in the full life cycle assessment. In the end, the specific ratio should be determined based on the product’s function, production scale, and cost structure.
Which plastics allow eco-friendly disposal or recycling?
Almost all common plastics can be disposed of in an eco-friendly way through physical recycling, chemical recycling or biodegradation. PET bottles and rigid HDPE/PP plastics are sorted, cleaned, melted and regranulated for use in textiles and packaging. PE, PP and PS can be converted into plastic oil through catalytic cracking or pyrolysis, which is then used to produce primary-grade PE and PP. PU foam recovers polyols through chemical depolymerization, which are reused in mattresses and building materials. In general, single-material designs can improve recycling efficiency.
It’s worth noting that if recycling is not done scientifically, recycled plastics may pose health risks. Microplastics from mechanical recycling can enter the human body through the food chain. Improper temperature control during pyrolysis recycling can release carcinogens like dioxins. When recycled plastics are used in food packaging, residual pollutants (such as heavy metals and plasticizers) may migrate into food, which is why the EU’s EFSA strictly restricts the use of rPET in food contact applications.
What testing validates material performance before full production?
Before full production, you can conduct mechanical performance tests, thermal performance verification, weather resistance evaluation and chemical compatibility experiments.
- Mechanical performance tests include ISO 527 for tensile strength and ISO 180 for impact toughness.
- Thermal performance verification covers UL 94 for flame retardancy rating and IEC 60068 for temperature cycle testing.
- Weather resistance evaluation includes ISO 4892 for UV aging and ISO 4611 for salt spray corrosion.
- Chemical compatibility experiments refer to ISO 175 for reagent resistance testing.
Depending on your needs, you can also verify the injection molding process window (melt flow rate MFR/ISO 1133) and test dimensional stability (ISO 294-4 for shrinkage rate). For medical devices or food contact applications, biocompatibility testing (ISO 10993) and migration analysis (EU 10/2011) are also required.
All these tests need to simulate actual service environment parameters.
Why do some materials require drying before processing?
Drying plastic materials before processing is mainly to get rid of moisture interference. Hygroscopic materials, like nylon, PC and PET, contain moisture. When processed at high temperatures, this moisture turns to vapor. It can cause injection defects such as silver streaks and bubbles. At the same time, this process triggers polymer hydrolysis. It breaks the molecular chains. This significantly reduces the material’s impact strength and dimensional stability. Drying the material controls moisture content (usually below 0.02%). This ensures the melt flows evenly and keeps its molecular structure intact. It also prevents the injection-molded products from losing mechanical performance or surface smoothness.
How can First Mold assist with complex material decisions?
First Mold provides customers with scientific injection material decision support by integrating material property databases and process simulation analysis.
First, we screen candidate materials based on product functional requirements, such as temperature resistance and impact resistance. Then we use mold runner simulations to predict how material flowability and shrinkage will affect molding quality.
Second, we collect temperature and pressure data during the injection process through a real-time process monitoring system. We also optimize gate designs to avoid silver streak defects in injection molding. In addition, we set up independent drying pipelines for highly hygroscopic materials like PA and PC. This ensures moisture content is ≤0.005%. We also use a closed-loop feeding system to prevent cross-contamination.
Finally, we rely on a full-life-cycle traceability mechanism to ensure material compliance, meeting strict certification requirements across various industries.