TPU vs TPE for Industrial Seals and Gaskets Compatibility
Industrial sealing applications demand more of an elastomeric material than most product categories. A seal that fails at 70°C instead of the specified 90°C, or one that swells in hydraulic fluid and loses compression set performance, produces equipment failure with downstream costs that dwarf the original material savings. Selecting between TPU and TPE for seals and gaskets requires understanding not just which material bonds to the housing substrate, but which material's physical properties hold up through the service conditions the seal must survive. What Industrial Seals Require Seals and gaskets perform through compression. Compressed between mating surfaces, they deform to fill microscopic irregularities in the mating faces and prevent fluid or gas passage. Performance depends on: Compression set resistance. Under sustained compression, elastomers creep and lose some of their recovery capability — the percentage of permanent deformation after compression and recovery is the compression set value. Low compression set (20% or below) means the seal maintains most of its original height after sustained loading, preserving sealing force. High compression set (above 40%) means the seal has flattened substantially and sealing force has declined. Temperature range. The elastomer must remain flexible and maintain compression set performance at both the minimum and maximum operating temperatures. Seals that stiffen and crack at low temperatures or soften and extrude at high temperatures fail through the same mechanism: inadequate compression force at the sealing interface. Chemical resistance. The fluid being sealed must not attack the elastomer. Swelling, extraction of plasticizers, surface softening, or degradation of the elastomer's physical properties all lead to seal failure over time. Substrate compatibility (for bonded seals). When the seal is bonded to a housing component — a metal flange, a plastic mounting plate, or a composite housing — the bond between the seal and the substrate must withstand the mechanical forces on the assembly. TPU for Industrial Seals TPU offers characteristics that make it suitable for specific sealing applications: High tensile and tear strength. TPU's mechanical durability exceeds most TPE sub-classes at equivalent Shore hardness. For seals that experience mechanical abrasion, extrusion under high differential pressure, or cut-through risk from sharp edges in the sealing groove, TPU's mechanical properties provide a margin that softer elastomers cannot. Shore hardness range for hard seals. TPU is available in Shore 70A to 65D — the upper range overlaps with semi-rigid seal applications (dynamic shaft seals, high-pressure lip seals) where SEBS or soft COPE would be too soft to resist extrusion under pressure. Substrate compatibility for bonded seal assemblies. TPU bonds to PA, PC, ABS, and PET housings through polar chemistry. This is relevant for integrated seal-and-housing designs where the seal is overmolded directly onto the housing component. TPU limitations for sealing: Standard ester-based TPU is susceptible to hydrolysis — not appropriate for sustained water, steam, or aqueous fluid sealing. Ether-based TPU improves hydrolysis resistance. TPU is not recommended for fuel or aromatic hydrocarbon sealing without formulation-specific verification. Compression set performance of TPU is generally adequate but inferior to EPDM-based TPV in sustained-compression applications.…