Selecting the right plastic material is critical for product performance, cost, and regulatory compliance. This guide provides a systematic framework for material selection across industries.
1. Define Application Requirements
Mechanical Requirements - Tensile strength: How much load must the part bear? - Impact strength: Will the part experience sudden impacts? - Flexural modulus: How stiff does the part need to be? - Elongation: How much deformation is acceptable?
Environmental Conditions - Temperature range: Min/max operating temperature - UV exposure: Indoor vs outdoor use - Chemical contact: Oils, solvents, acids, bases - Moisture: Humidity, immersion, or steam
Regulatory Requirements - Food contact: FDA, EU 10/2011 - Flame retardancy: UL94, IEC 60335 - Automotive: FMVSS 302, VDA standards - Medical: ISO 10993, USP Class VI
Cost Considerations - Material cost per kg - Processing cost (cycle time, energy) - Tooling cost (mold complexity) - Total cost of ownership (warranty, failure)
2. Material Property Comparison
Commodity Plastics (Low Cost) - PP: Lightweight, chemical resistant, low cost. Good for packaging, automotive interior - PE: Flexible, moisture resistant. Good for containers, film - PVC: Flame retardant, versatile. Good for pipes, profiles
Engineering Plastics (Medium Cost) - ABS: Good impact, easy processing. Good for housings, appliances - PA6/PA66: High strength, wear resistant. Good for gears, mechanical parts - PC: Transparent, high impact. Good for lenses, safety equipment - POM: Low friction, dimensional stability. Good for gears, fasteners
High-Performance Plastics (High Cost) - PBT: Electrical properties, chemical resistant. Good for connectors - PPS: High temperature, chemical resistant. Good for under-hood automotive - PEEK: Extreme performance. Good for aerospace, medical implants
Selection Matrix: | Priority | Recommended Materials | |----------|----------------------| | Low cost | PP, PE, PVC | | Strength | PA6, PA66, POM | | Impact | PC, ABS, PC/ABS | | Heat resistance | PPS, PBT, PEEK | | UV resistance | ASA, UV-PP, PC | | Flame retardancy | FR-ABS, FR-PP, FR-PA6 |
3. Processing Compatibility
Injection Molding - Most versatile process - PP, PE, ABS, PA6, PC, POM all suitable - Consider melt flow index (MFI) for thin-wall parts - Fiber-filled grades require higher injection pressure
Extrusion - Continuous profile production - PP, PE, PVC, ABS profiles - Consider melt strength for complex profiles
Blow Molding - Hollow parts (bottles, tanks) - PP, PE, PVC most common - Parison control critical for wall uniformity
Process-Material Fit: - Thin-wall injection: High MFI grades (PP, PA6) - Large part injection: Low shrinkage (ABS, PC/ABS) - Outdoor extrusion: UV-stabilized (ASA, UV-PP) - Food contact: FDA-compliant grades required
4. Cost Optimization Strategies
Material Substitution - ABS → PP: 30-40% cost reduction (if mechanical requirements allow) - PA66 → PA6: 10-15% cost reduction (similar properties) - PC → PC/ABS: 20-25% cost reduction (with maintained impact)
Filled/Modified Grades - Talc-filled PP: Higher stiffness at lower cost - Glass-fiber PA6: Higher strength than unfilled PA66 - Mineral-filled PP: Better dimensional stability
Masterbatch Approach - Color masterbatch: Lower cost than pre-colored resin - Additive masterbatch: Customize properties at lower MOQ - Functional masterbatch: Add flame retardancy, UV resistance, etc.
Volume Considerations - < 1 ton: Use standard grades, masterbatch approach - 1-10 tons: Negotiate compound pricing - > 10 tons: Consider custom compounding