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Top 6 Considerations Before Selecting Silicone Materials for Manufacturing

Raw silicone material for custom silicone product manufacturing and quality verification

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Table of Content

The choice of silicone materials to be used in the manufacturing process is not just about selecting a grade or hardness, but is a systematic process of engineering that needs to consider performance, processing, compliance, cost, and consistency in production.

The teams are to consider the six key aspects when choosing silicone materials to manufacture. Our structured silicone material selection process helps ensure all these factors are evaluated early and comprehensively.

Most consumers start by ordering a certain hardness, color or even food-grade silicone. As a matter of fact this information is only a portion of the decision. The appropriate silicone rubber material should correspond to the real operating conditions of the product and the manufacturing process chosen. A carefully chosen silicone material facilitates continuous production, product performance, and consistency in quality in repeat orders — especially for high-quality custom silicone products.

Why Silicone Material Selection Matters Before Manufacturing

The final decision on the material to be used in the tooling process should be made before the tooling process. This is because the choice of material can influence the design of the mold, how it cures, dimensional stability, surface finish and performance of the final product.

The choice of the material determines the whole production process. The defects that can arise due to an inappropriate silicone include flash, voids, defective surface finish, or improper curing. It can also cause dimensional shrinkage, weak bonding in overmolding or premature aging in real-world applications. After tooling, it is usually costly and time-consuming to change the material, and that will require modifications of the mold or even new tooling.

Prior confirmation assists sampling to proceed more successfully and aids in repeatable mass production. The following table presents some of the problems that can be caused by late or incomplete decisions: 

Material Selection IssuePossible Manufacturing Impact
Wrong hardnessPoor fit, weak sealing, uncomfortable touch, or deformation
Poor temperature resistanceCracking, aging, or performance failure
Incompatible molding processLonger cycle time or unstable curing
Weak surface compatibilityPrinting, coating, or logo adhesion problems — see our surface finishing compatibility options (silk screen, spray coating, laser engraving)
Missing compliance confirmationDelays in approval, testing, or export documentation
Raw silicone material for custom silicone product manufacturing and quality verification

Consideration 1: Product Application and End-Use Environment

The initial step in the choice of silicone materials is knowledge of where and how the product will actually be utilized.

Is the location of the part indoors or outdoor? Does it touch food, skin, pets, or work around electronics, automotive fluids or industrial chemicals? Heat, cold, UV light, moisture, oil, friction, repeated stretching, or aggressive cleaning agents are only some of the factors that affect performance.

A base silicone can behave in various manners, depending on the environment. Something that functions well in a kitchen might crack outside in the UV and changes in temperature. Early environmental analysis avoids failures in the field, extravagant redesigns. 

Product EnvironmentMaterial Requirement
Food-contact productsLow odor, food-contact suitability, easy cleaning
Automotive partsHeat resistance, oil resistance, compression performance
Outdoor productsUV resistance, weather resistance, aging resistance
Consumer electronicsInsulation, dimensional stability, clean appearance
Pet productsTear resistance, durability, safe material selection
Personal care productsSkin-contact comfort, softness, surface quality

Consideration 2: Required Material Properties

The choice of material properties should be based on product functionality, rather than a generic assumption about silicone rubber.

To ensure that the final application is compatible with the material used, product teams ought to consider the key factors in silicone material selection before tooling can commence.

Important properties to consider would be: 

  • Temperature resistance (continuous and peak)
  • Tear strength
  • Tensile strength
  • Elongation and recovery
  • Compression set
  • Chemical resistance
  • Electrical insulation
  • Stability of odor and color. 
Material PropertyWhy It Matters
Temperature resistancePrevents deformation, cracking, or aging under heat/cold
Tear strengthHelps products resist ripping during use
Tensile strengthSupports stretching and load-bearing performance
ElongationAffects flexibility and recovery after stretching
Compression setCritical for seals, gaskets, and cushioning parts
Chemical resistanceReduces degradation from oils, solvents, or cleaners
Electrical insulationImportant for electronic and industrial components

Consideration 3: Hardness and Mechanical Performance

The choice of silicone hardness depends on the way the product needs to bend, seal, grip, cushion, stretch or hold its shape.

Hardness is used in Shore A. The lower ones are softer and more flexible but not as stable. The latter are better shaped but may be hard and decrease sealing performance. In real geometry, sample testing is often necessary due to the different behavior of hardness in thin versus thick sections. 

Shore A Hardness RangeTypical Feel / BehaviorCommon Use Cases
10–30 Shore AVery soft, flexible, cushioningSoft touch parts, baby products, wearables
30–50 Shore ABalanced flexibility and stabilityKitchenware, sleeves, buttons, pet products
50–70 Shore AFirmer, better shape retentionGaskets, seals, plugs, industrial parts
70+ Shore ARigid feel for siliconeStructural or high-support components

Consideration 4: Manufacturing Process Compatibility

A silicone material should be able to conform to the planned manufacturing process otherwise sampling and mass production will be unstable. 

Various processes require various forms and behaviors of materials: 

  • Compression molding uses high-consistency rubber (HCR) and is adapted to thicker or simpler geometries.
  • Low-viscosity materials and fine tooling are required in liquid silicone rubber (LSR) injection molding of high volume and tight-tolerance parts.
  • Co-injection or overmolding requires materials that have good bonding properties.
  • In extrusion, there should be constant flow of profiles and tubes. 

The flow of material, speed of curing, rate of shrinkage, as well as thickness, influence the process that is viable. 

Manufacturing ProcessMaterial ConsiderationSuitable Product Types
Compression moldingWorks well with solid silicone / HCR(ideal for silicone compression molding) Mats, sleeves, seals, kitchenware, pet products
Liquid injection moldingRequires Liquid Silicone Rubber (LSR) injection molding and precision toolingHigh-volume precision parts, medical or baby products
Co-injection moldingRequires compatible materialsMulti-color or multi-material silicone products
ExtrusionRequires consistent flow and profile stabilityTubes, strips, profiles, continuous sealing parts
Custom silicone components made with different silicone materials and hardness options

Consideration 5: Compliance and Safety Requirements

The compliance should be taken into account at the stage of selecting material since the requirements of testing, documentation and export may directly influence the schedule of product introduction.

Target markets define the required certifications FDA, LFGB, REACH, RoHS, and so on. The term food-grade has a wide variety of definitions, depending upon the regulation and testing measures. Baby products and products that are in contact with the skin tend to have higher limits on volatiles and extractables.

Early confirmation of these needs will prevent last minute re-formulation of the need or shipment failures. 

Product CategoryCommon Compliance Consideration
Kitchenware and baking toolsFood-contact suitability, odor control, temperature stability
Baby productsSafety, hygiene, low odor, strict material documentation
Personal care productsSkin-contact comfort and material safety
Electronics accessoriesRoHS / REACH-related material restrictions
Industrial partsPerformance testing, environmental resistance
Food-grade silicone toddler feeding plates and utensils for material selection comparison

Consideration 6: Cost, Scalability, and Long-Term Quality Consistency

The most economical cost of material is not necessarily the lowest cost of material when it results in a higher defect rate, inconsistent production or inconsistent repeat-order.

Assess total landed cost, yield, cycle time, scrap rate and long-term quality consistency — including batch-to-batch repeatability.A higher grade material may present some better overall economics through smoother production and less quality claims. 

Cost FactorWhy It Should Be Evaluated
Raw material priceAffects unit cost but does not show full production risk
Cycle timeInfluences production efficiency and lead time
Defect ratePoor material matching can increase scrap
Color consistencyImportant for branded consumer products
Batch repeatabilityCritical for long-term OEM/ODM orders
Testing requirementsMay affect approval cost and delivery timeline

Common Mistakes Before Selecting Silicone Materials

The vast majority of the silicone material problems are the result of premature decision making without sufficient information about the application, process, testing and scale of production. Frequent pitfalls include: 

  • Selection of material on the basis of hardness alone.
  • Ordering food-grade silicone without ensuring the standard of the target market.
  • Disregarding compression set in the sealing of products.
  • Choosing material and not making sure of the molding process.
  • Ignoring compatibility of surface finishing (printing, laser engraving, coating)
  • Comparison of prices of raw materials only.
  • Omitting test of real-use conditions on samples.
  • Substituting materials once they have been moulded. 

Practical Checklist Before Confirming Silicone Material

By just having a checklist, the product teams can minimize risk before exiting concept phase and going to mold development phase. 

Question to ConfirmWhy It Matters
What is the product’s main function?Determines key material properties
Will it contact food, skin, pets, or electronics?Affects safety and compliance needs
What temperature range will it face?Helps prevent aging or deformation
Will it stretch, compress, bend, or seal?Guides hardness and mechanical requirements
What molding process will be used?Ensures material-process compatibility
Is surface finishing required?Affects printing, spraying, or engraving suitability
What market will the product be sold in?Determines required documentation and testing
What production volume is expected?Supports cost and scalability planning

Conclusion — Selecting Silicone Materials Is a Manufacturing Decision

The product teams must consider more than just hardness, color, or cost when deciding which silicone materials to use to manufacture the product. An effective decision takes into account the actual environment of use of the product, the performance required, the process of molding, compliance requirements and repeat production expectations. These six factors should be considered early on because that way, silicone products are bound to deliver the same performance on sampling through mass production.

Excellent selection of silicone material aids both superior product functionality and reliable production results. Partnering with an experienced OEM & ODM silicone manufacturing team makes these early considerations far more effective and scalable.Early design is a way to avoid costly surprises down the line and it is a way of producing reliable custom silicone products that will not disappoint by order after order. 

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