TPU vs TPE Compatibility Chart for Common Engineering Plastics

  • Post last modified:April 24, 2026

Material selection for multi-material overmolding and bonding applications requires a systematic view of which elastomer-substrate combinations produce reliable adhesion, which require process intervention, and which should be avoided. The compatibility ratings below reflect the practical adhesion outcomes achievable in production injection molding and adhesive bonding applications — not laboratory-optimized conditions. Ratings assume clean, properly dried substrates and appropriate processing parameters.

Compatibility Rating Definitions

A — Compatible without treatment: Cohesive failure achievable in standard overmolding conditions without adhesion promoters or surface preparation. Suitable for structural bonds.

B — Compatible with process control: Adequate adhesion achievable when processing parameters (mold temperature, substrate drying, transfer time) are tightly controlled. Cohesive failure possible but process-sensitive.

C — Requires adhesion promotion: Standard process produces adhesive failure. Silane primer, tie-layer materials, or plasma treatment required for structural adhesion.

D — Not compatible without major intervention: Poor natural affinity. Specialized etching, corona treatment, or complete reformulation required. Not recommended for new designs.

ABS (Acrylonitrile-Butadiene-Styrene) — Surface Energy: 38–42 mN/m

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPU (ether-based) A Strong natural affinity; cohesive failure without primers; widest process window
TPU (ester-based) A Higher initial bond strength; avoid in humid service environments
SEBS A Styrenic end-block compatibility; mold temp >60°C required
SBS B Bonds well; UV/thermal degradation limits to protected, short-life applications
COPE C Limited affinity for ABS; adhesion promoter required
PEBA C Amide chemistry not matched to ABS; tie-layer required
TPV C Inconsistent without coupling agent or surface treatment

Polycarbonate (PC) — Surface Energy: 42–46 mN/m

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPU (ether-based) A Strong affinity; CSC risk requires PC-screened formulation; hydrolysis resistant
TPU (ester-based) B Higher initial bond strength; CSC risk higher; avoid in humid service
COPE A Ester-to-ester compatibility; requires mold temp >75°C; high-temperature capable
SEBS C Inconsistent without adhesion promoter or tie-layer; UV stable
TPV D Poor adhesion without plasma treatment or COPE tie-layer
PEBA D Not matched to PC surface chemistry

PA6 and PA66 (Nylon 6/6.6) — Surface Energy: 40–44 mN/m (dry-as-molded)

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPU (ether-based) A Strong urethane-amide interaction; moisture management critical
TPU (ester-based) B Higher initial bond; degrades in humid service; use only for dry environments
PEBA A Amide-to-amide compatibility; mold temp >80°C required
SEBS C Requires silane primer for structural bonds
TPV C Requires surface treatment or PEBA tie-layer
COPE D Ester chemistry not matched to amide surface

PA12 (Nylon 12) — Surface Energy: 35–38 mN/m (lower amide density)

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPU (ether-based) B/C Reduced amide density limits urethane-amide interaction; silane primer + mechanical interlocks needed
PEBA B/C Better than SEBS; still weaker than on PA6; interlocks required
SEBS D Poor natural affinity; not recommended without major adhesion promotion

PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate) — Surface Energy: 40–44 mN/m

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPU A Urethane-to-ester interaction; similar to PC mechanism
COPE A Ester-to-ester compatibility; strong natural affinity
SEBS C Requires adhesion promotion
PEBA C Amide chemistry limited affinity for PET

Rigid PVC — Surface Energy: 38–42 mN/m

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPU A Good adhesion on rigid PVC; verify plasticizer compatibility for flexible grades
SEBS B Adequate adhesion; plasticizer migration from flexible PVC can contaminate bond over time
TPV B Reasonable compatibility; validate chemical resistance

Polypropylene (PP) — Surface Energy: 29–31 mN/m

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPO/Polyolefin-backbone TPE A Natural affinity through polyolefin matrix compatibility
SEBS (polyolefin-modified) B Modified SEBS with PP-compatible mid-block; standard SEBS is C
TPU C Requires plasma/flame treatment; bond strength lower than on polar substrates
COPE D No affinity for non-polar PP
PEBA D No affinity for non-polar PP

HDPE / LDPE — Surface Energy: 31–33 mN/m

Elastomer Rating Notes
TPO/Polyolefin TPE B Better than other TPE types; surface energy still low
TPU D Does not bond without surface activation and primer
SEBS D Poor adhesion even with treatment

For material pairing guidance and adhesion-promotion solutions for your specific substrate and elastomer combination, Email Us.

Key Takeaways from the Compatibility Chart

TPU is the most broadly compatible elastomer across polar engineering plastics (ABS, PC, PA, PET, rigid PVC). Its polar urethane chemistry finds a compatible bonding partner in most engineering thermoplastics through urethane-amide, urethane-ester, and urethane-nitrile interactions.

TPE sub-class matching to substrate chemistry is essential. SEBS for ABS; COPE for PC and PET; PEBA for PA6/PA66; polyolefin TPE for PP. Specifying the wrong sub-class produces adhesive failure regardless of process parameters.

Low-surface-energy substrates (PP, PE) require surface treatment for all elastomers except polyolefin-matched TPE grades. Surface treatment is required for any structural bond on polyolefins.

Difficult grades within families (PA12, glass-filled PA) require mechanical interlocks and primers regardless of which elastomer is selected — chemical adhesion alone is insufficient on these surfaces.

Incure’s adhesive and coating formulations support demanding multi-material assemblies across all engineering plastic substrates, including adhesion-promotion solutions for difficult-to-bond combinations. For technical support on material selection and compatibility validation, Contact Our Team.

Visit www.incurelab.com for more information.