Technical Guide2026-05-1010 min read

How UV Rays Affect Plastic Materials

Understand how UV radiation causes photo-oxidative degradation in plastics. Learn the mechanisms of UV damage, which plastics are most susceptible, and how UV stabilizer technology prevents degradation.

Understanding UV Radiation

Ultraviolet radiation from sunlight spans wavelengths from 100 nm to 400 nm, divided into three bands. Only UVA and UVB reach the Earth's surface and affect plastics:

UVA (315–400 nm)

Most Relevant

Accounts for ~95% of UV radiation reaching Earth's surface. Penetrates deep into polymers. The primary driver of long-term outdoor degradation.

UVB (280–315 nm)

Moderate

More energetic but mostly absorbed by the ozone layer (~5% reaches surface). Causes faster surface damage but less total degradation than UVA due to lower intensity.

💡 Key point: UVC (100–280 nm) is entirely absorbed by the ozone layer and does not reach the Earth's surface. However, UVC is used in laboratory QUV testing (QUV-C) for accelerated worst-case degradation studies.

Photo-Oxidative Degradation Mechanism

UV degradation follows a well-characterized chain reaction mechanism. Understanding each step is essential for selecting the right stabilization strategy:

1

Initiation

UV photons with sufficient energy (λ < 400 nm) are absorbed by chromophoric groups in the polymer or by impurities/defects. This generates free radicals (R•) at weak points in the molecular structure, such as tertiary carbons or unsaturated bonds.

2
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Propagation

Free radicals rapidly react with atmospheric oxygen (O₂), forming peroxy radicals (ROO•). These abstract hydrogen from adjacent polymer chains, creating new alkyl radicals and hydroperoxides (ROOH). This is the chain reaction that amplifies the initial damage exponentially.

3
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Chain Scission

Hydroperoxides decompose under UV or heat, cleaving polymer chains (chain scission). This reduces average molecular weight (Mw), narrows the molecular weight distribution, and directly degrades mechanical properties — tensile strength, elongation, and impact resistance all decline.

4
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Property Loss

The cumulative effect of chain scission and cross-linking manifests as visible and measurable degradation: embrittlement, color change (ΔE), surface cracking (crazing), gloss loss, chalking, and ultimately part failure. The material becomes unfit for its intended service.

Visual Signs of UV Damage

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Chalking

White powdery residue on the surface caused by polymer degradation releasing filler particles and low-molecular-weight fragments.

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Yellowing

Discoloration caused by formation of chromophoric groups during oxidation. Particularly noticeable in white and clear plastics. Measured as color change ΔE.

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Cracking

Surface microcracks (crazing) that develop into macro-cracks under stress. Indicates significant molecular weight reduction and loss of ductility.

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Brittleness

Loss of impact strength and elongation at break. A part that was once flexible becomes rigid and fragile, fracturing easily under mechanical load.

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Gloss Loss

Surface roughening from degradation reduces light reflection. The part appears dull and aged, even if structural integrity remains.

Which Plastics Are Most Susceptible?

Not all polymers degrade at the same rate. Chemical structure determines inherent UV resistance:

⚠️ Most Vulnerable

  • PPTertiary carbons in the chain make it highly susceptible to radical formation
  • PEModerate susceptibility; branch points act as weak sites
  • ABSButadiene rubber phase oxidizes rapidly under UV

Naturally Resistant

  • ASAAcrylic rubber phase inherently UV-stable; no stabilizer migration
  • PCGood inherent resistance; UV absorbers extend life further
  • PMMAExcellent outdoor stability; used in optical applications

How Long Until UV Damage Appears?

The time to visible UV damage varies dramatically by material and stabilization:

MaterialUnprotectedWith UV Stabilizer
PP3–6 months5–10 years
PE6–12 months3–8 years
ABS6–12 months5–8 years
ASA10+ years15+ years
PC3–5 years8–15 years
PMMA10+ years15–20 years

Values represent typical outdoor exposure in temperate climates. Actual performance varies with color, thickness, and local UV index.

Prevention: UV Stabilizer Technology

UV stabilizers target specific steps in the degradation mechanism to prevent or slow down the process:

🛡️

UV Absorbers (UVA)

Targets: Blocks Initiation

Absorb UV photons before they reach polymer chains. Convert UV energy to harmless heat through a reversible molecular mechanism. Benzotriazoles and benzophenones are the most common types. Most effective in thick sections.

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HALS (Hindered Amine Light Stabilizers)

Targets: Stops Propagation

Scavenge free radicals (R•, ROO•) generated during photo-oxidation, interrupting the chain reaction. Regenerative mechanism — the active species is recycled, providing long-lasting protection even at low concentrations (0.3–1.0%). Most effective for polyolefins.

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Antioxidants

Targets: Prevents Thermal Oxidation

Primary antioxidants (hindered phenols) scavenge radicals; secondary antioxidants (phosphites) decompose hydroperoxides. Essential during high-temperature processing and for long-term thermal stability in outdoor service.

Quenchers

Targets: Deactivates Excited States

Deactivate excited-state molecules before they can initiate free radical formation. Transfer energy from excited chromophores to a lower energy state. Nickel-based quenchers are commonly used in agricultural films and synthetic turf.

Synergistic approach: The most effective UV protection combines HALS + UVA + Antioxidants. This three-way system addresses initiation, propagation, and thermal oxidation simultaneously, providing comprehensive protection for demanding outdoor applications.

Testing & Standards

Three principal methods are used to evaluate UV resistance:

QUV Testing

ASTM G154

Fluorescent UV lamps simulate sunlight. Fastest method, most widely used for quality control and material comparison.

Xenon Arc

SAE J2527 / ISO 4892-2

Closest match to full-spectrum sunlight including visible and IR. Preferred for automotive and premium applications.

Natural Weathering

ASTM G7 / ISO 877

Outdoor exposure in reference climates (Florida, Arizona). Slowest but most accurate prediction of real-world performance.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does sunlight damage plastics?

UV photons in sunlight (290–400 nm) are absorbed by the polymer, generating free radicals. These initiate a chain oxidation reaction (photo-oxidation) that breaks polymer chains, reducing molecular weight and causing embrittlement, color change, and surface cracking.

Can UV damage be reversed?

No. UV degradation is an irreversible chemical process — polymer chains are permanently broken and molecular weight is permanently reduced. Prevention through proper material selection and UV stabilization is the only effective strategy.

Which plastics degrade fastest in sunlight?

Polypropylene (PP) is among the most susceptible — unstabilized PP can show visible degradation in 3–6 months of outdoor exposure. Polyethylene (PE) and ABS also degrade relatively quickly without stabilization. ASA, PMMA, and PC have inherent UV resistance.

How do UV stabilizers prevent degradation?

UV absorbers block UV photons from reaching the polymer. HALS scavenge free radicals to stop the oxidation chain reaction. Antioxidants prevent thermal oxidation during processing and service. Quenchers deactivate excited molecules before they form radicals. Combining these mechanisms provides the most robust protection.

Protect Your Products from UV Degradation

YicaiPlas offers a full range of UV resistant materials — from cost-effective UV-stabilized PP to premium ASA alloy. Our team can help you select the right grade based on your exposure conditions and durability targets.

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