To assess the performance of silicone material products, product teams ought to assess Shore hardness, temperature resistance, tensile strength, tear resistance, elongation and recovery, compression set, chemical and environmental resistance, surface finish durability, and most importantly, real-use sample testing, and production consistency across batches.
The performance of silicone is only evaluated by many buyers by requesting a hardness value in silicone such as 40 Shore A or 60 Shore A. In practice two silicone materials of the same hardness can behave very differently depending on formulation, curing system, fillers, geometry, production process, and application environment.
The degree to which a suggested silicone material will perform in the actual use conditions of the product should be considered rather than a single datasheet number or sample feel.
The performance evaluation of silicone material is not about monitoring one specification, but rather an understanding of how hardness, temperature resistance, elasticity, durability, chemical exposure, and manufacturing process interact with each other in the final product.
Why Silicone Material Performance Evaluation Matters
The performance evaluation of silicone material is important as the inappropriate material may appear to be okay in a sample but fail during actual operation, assembly, cleaning, heating, compression, or long-term exposure.
Effective evaluation will directly influence sealing integrity, flexibility, cushioning, grip, insulation, heat resistance and overall durability. Cracking, tearing, permanent deformation, unusual odors, compressional failures, loose fits, or customer complaints that negatively influence brand reputation and bolster the return rate are often caused by poor choices.
Whenever possible, material selection must occur prior to development of mold. The performance requirements in different industries differ widely: the needs of kitchenware include high heat and cleaning resistance, pet products require high tear strength, automotive parts may need oil and heat aging performance, and personal care products may need skin contact and surface resistance performance.
| Performance Area | Product Impact |
| Hardness | Affects softness, flexibility, grip, sealing, and shape retention |
| Temperature resistance | Prevents deformation, cracking, aging, or loss of elasticity |
| Tear strength | Helps resist ripping during stretching or repeated use |
| Compression set | Determines sealing recovery and cushioning performance |
| Chemical resistance | Reduces swelling, softening, or degradation |
| Durability | Supports long-term product reliability and customer satisfaction |
Hardness: What Shore A Really Means
Silicone hardness should be perceived as a working design option, rather than a figure on a material specification sheet.
Shore A hardness is a measure of the resistance to indentation. The softer materials (lower Shore A) are more flexible, soft touch feel, cushioning, and sealing contact. Harder materials offer better shape retention, structural support and dimensional stability under load.
The geometry of products is a significant factor–thin walls or complex shapes can make the same hardness feel softer or stiffer in practice. Even different formulations that are the same hardness rating may also act differently because of filler content and curing methods.
Product teams can look at how hardness, type of material, molding process and actual performance in the real world should be looked at together before settling on a Shore A hardness to use in a custom part.
One should never test the hardness value alone and only use it to decide whether to use or not to use that sample.
| Shore A Hardness Range | Practical Feel / Behavior | Common Application Examples |
| 10–30 Shore A | Very soft, flexible, cushioning | Wearable parts, soft-touch items, baby-related silicone components |
| 30–50 Shore A | Balanced softness and stability | Kitchenware, sleeves, buttons, pet products |
| 50–70 Shore A | Firmer, better shape retention | Gaskets, seals, plugs, industrial molded parts |
| 70+ Shore A | Very firm for silicone | Structural support parts or high-stability components |
Temperature Resistance: Heat, Cold, and Aging Behavior
Temperature resistance is to be considered based on the actual exposure conditions of the product and not just on an approximate silicone temperature range.
Although silicone typically provides a broad temperature range application, actual performance is based on grade, formulation, curing system, and actual application. Hot weather may lead to loss of elasticity, discoloration, development of odor, or aging. Cold weather can lower the flexibility and the rebound.
Constant exposure can be less challenging than repeated thermal cycling. Different temperature requirements are placed on kitchenware, automotive components, outdoor product, and electronics.
| Temperature Scenario | Evaluation Focus |
| High heat exposure | Aging, deformation, odor, discoloration, elasticity loss |
| Low temperature use | Flexibility, cracking resistance, rebound |
| Repeated heating and cooling | Fatigue, dimensional stability, long-term durability |
| Food or kitchen use | Heat resistance, odor control, cleaning performance |
| Automotive environment | Heat aging, oil exposure, compression performance |
| Electronics use | Thermal stability and insulation performance |
Tensile Strength, Tear Resistance, and Elongation
Stretch performance must be considered where silicone products are pulled, bent, twisted, stretched, assembled, or subjected to repetitive mechanical stress.
Tensile strength refers to its ability to resist when being pulled apart. Tear resistance is the ability of the material to resist tearing when a nick or stress point has been found. Elongation is the greatest extension that can be achieved prior to a break and recovery is the ability of the part to resume its shape after a break.
Design features of products such as thickness, corners, holes and edges have massive effects on the actual performance. The extreme elongation cannot ensure durability in the case of low tear resistance.
| Property | What It Measures | Why It Matters |
| Tensile strength | Resistance to pulling force | Important for stretched or load-bearing silicone parts |
| Tear resistance | Resistance to ripping | Critical for thin walls, holes, edges, and pet products |
| Elongation | Stretch capacity before breaking | Important for sleeves, covers, wearables, and flexible parts |
| Recovery | Ability to return after deformation | Affects fit, comfort, and long-term usability |
Compression Set: A Critical Factor for Seals and Gaskets
Compression set is among the most crucial performance measurement of silicone seals, gaskets, cushions, and parts which have to recuperate following strain.
A compression set is the measure of permanent deformation following extended compression, more so at heat. Low compression: this is to make sure that the material used has sealing force and rebounds over time. Leakage, loose fits or reduced cushioning are all as a result of high compression set.
The results are highly influenced by temperature and duration of load. The products (sealing) always need testing by using in real life rather than just visual examination.
| Product Type | Why Compression Set Matters |
| Silicone seals | Maintains sealing force after compression |
| Gaskets | Helps prevent leakage over time |
| Cushioning parts | Supports rebound and comfort |
| Plugs and caps | Maintains fit and sealing contact |
| Automotive components | Resists heat and long-term compression |
Chemical, UV, Moisture, and Environmental Resistance
Whenever silicone products are subjected to oils, chemicals, cleaning agents, sunlight, moisture, sweat, or outdoor environment, environmental resistance should be considered.
The effects of chemical contact may include swelling, softening, discoloration or loss of strength. Exposure to UV hastens aging and fading. Surface quality, odor and hygiene depend on moisture and cleaning agents. Wearables and personal care products also have extra issues with sweat and skin oils.
| Exposure Condition | Possible Risk If Not Tested |
| Oils or grease | Swelling, softening, or performance loss |
| Cleaning chemicals | Surface degradation or color change |
| UV exposure | Aging, fading, or surface cracking |
| Moisture | Odor, surface change, or hygiene concerns |
| Sweat and skin oils | Coating wear or touch-feel change |
| Industrial fluids | Chemical attack or dimensional instability |
Surface Finish Durability and Appearance Stability
The evaluation of surface performance should be done in conjunction with material performance since the silicone products may require printing, coating, laser engraving, color stability, or a particular touch feel.
Printing and coatings may delaminate when there is a poor compatibility of the base material. The uniformity of color is important in branded products. The outcome of laser engraving is determined by the reaction of the material. Finishes should be matte, glossy or textured and should not be degraded by rubbing, cleaning, stretching and heat.
| Surface Requirement | Performance Test to Consider |
| Printed logo | Rubbing, cleaning, stretching, adhesion |
| Spray coating | Peel resistance, wear resistance, gloss consistency |
| Laser engraving | Mark clarity and long-term readability |
| Soft-touch finish | Sweat, friction, dust attraction, aging |
| Color consistency | Batch comparison and heat exposure |
| Textured surface | Cleanability, grip, and wear resistance |
Real-Use Testing: Why Datasheets Are Not Enough
Datasheets are good starting points, but actual use sample testing is needed since the actual performance of a final product depends on material, geometry, molding, finishing and use conditions to work together.
The nominal datasheet conditions are seldom equal to the actual geometry of the products, the method of assembling the products and the environment of the customer. The design of molds, curing conditions, and post-processing have an impact. The test to be done on the samples should be under conditions as close to reality as possible- including customer-use cycles.
| Product Category | Suggested Real-Use Evaluation |
| Kitchenware | Heat, cleaning, odor, deformation, surface stability |
| Silicone sleeves | Stretch recovery, grip, assembly fit, surface wear |
| Pet products | Tear resistance, bite resistance, friction durability |
| Seals and gaskets | Compression set, fit, leakage, heat or chemical exposure |
| Electronics accessories | Dimensional fit, insulation, heat stability, touch feel |
| Wearables | Skin comfort, sweat exposure, flexibility, coating durability |
Common Mistakes When Evaluating Silicone Performance
The majority of performance issues occur when teams consider silicone materials too narrow or too late in the product development process.
Common mistakes include:
- Selection of material based solely on Shore hardness.
- The assumption is that every type of silicone has the same heat resistance.
- Neglecting compression set to seal applications.
- Making comparisons between datasheets without conducting actual tests of molded samples.
- Ignoring the effects of product geometry and wall thickness.
- Failure to consider surface finishing durability.
- Omitting actual use-condition testing.
- Altering material when the mold has developed.
- Lacking confirmation of batch-to-batch consistency when repetitive orders are made.
Practical Silicone Material Performance Evaluation Checklist
To ensure that a silicone material can address both the functional and manufacturing needs, a structured evaluation checklist would assist the product teams to verify that the silicone material can meet the required needs.
| Question to Confirm | Why It Matters |
| What hardness range does the product need? | Defines flexibility, sealing, grip, and shape retention |
| What temperature range will the product face? | Helps prevent aging, deformation, or cracking |
| Will the product stretch, bend, or twist? | Determines tensile, tear, and elongation needs |
| Will it stay compressed for long periods? | Makes compression set evaluation necessary |
| Will it contact oils, chemicals, sweat, or cleaning agents? | Determines environmental resistance needs |
| Does the product need printing, coating, or laser engraving? | Affects surface compatibility and durability |
| Will it contact food, skin, pets, or sensitive users? | Requires safety and documentation review |
| Has the sample been tested under real-use conditions? | Confirms practical performance before production |
| Can the material remain consistent across repeat orders? | Supports long-term product quality |
Conclusion — Silicone Performance Must Be Evaluated in Context
To consider the performance of silicone material, it is necessary to look further than a one-specification. The correct material must align with the functionality of the product, its working environment, mechanical forces, surface finish, compliance requirements and the production process. By taking a joint look at hardness, temperature resistance, durability and real-use testing, product teams can reduce risk and make more reliable material decisions before tooling and mass production.



