Polyurethane elastomers are widely used in mining, oil & gas, and hydraulic systems operating in harsh environments. Based on nearly 20 years of engineering and manufacturing experience in high-performance polyurethane components, one of the most common issues we encounter in cold regions is unexpected material failure due to improper material selection.
Actual Temperature Capability
While standard polyurethane elastomers are often quoted as working between -30°C to +60°C, this range is highly dependent on formulation. In real industrial applications:
– Standard polyester-based PU may become brittle below -20°C
– Polyether-based PU can typically perform down to -40°C
– Specialized low-temperature formulations can reach below -90°C
Therefore, temperature resistance should never be evaluated without considering material system and application conditions.
Engineering Factors
From an engineering perspective, low-temperature performance depends on:
1. Material chemistry (polyether vs polyester)
2. Hardness (lower hardness improves flexibility but reduces strength)
3. Load conditions (static vs dynamic impact)
4. Environment (oil, water, or mixed media)
In our experience, dynamic impact applications such as hydraulic breakers are far more sensitive to low-temperature brittleness than static sealing applications.
Real Failure Cases
In cold regions like Canada, we have observed:
– Premature cracking of high-hardness PU parts
– Seal leakage due to loss of elasticity
– Sudden fracture under impact load
In most cases, these failures were not due to material limits, but incorrect formulation selection.
Proven Engineering Solutions
To ensure reliable performance in cold climates, we recommend:
– Using polyether-based systems for water and low-temperature environments
– Designing multi-hardness structures (e.g., 75D core + 60A outer layer)
– Optimizing geometry to reduce stress concentration
– Conducting real-condition testing rather than relying on theoretical data
These solutions have been successfully applied in mining equipment, hydraulic breakers, and pipeline systems.
Applications
Typical successful applications include:
– Hydraulic breaker damping systems (impact + vibration)
– Mining screening panels (abrasion + water + cold)
– Pipeline pigging components (oil + water + temperature variation)
FAQ
Q: Can polyurethane work at -80°C?
A: Yes, but only with proper material selection and formulation.
Q: Why do PU parts fail in cold climates?
A: In most cases, due to incorrect material system selection rather than inherent material limits.
Conclusion
Polyurethane elastomers can perform reliably in extreme cold environments when engineered correctly. The key is not the material itself, but how it is selected, formulated, and applied.
If you need any help about this, please contact us .
