Back to Knowledge Center
Material Comparison|10 min

PP vs ABS: Complete Comparison Guide

Detailed comparison of polypropylene and ABS across mechanical properties, chemical resistance, processing, and cost. Decision framework for material substitution.

PP and ABS are two of the most widely used thermoplastics, each with distinct advantages. This guide provides a detailed comparison to help you choose the right material for your application.

1. Mechanical Properties

Tensile Strength - PP: 25-40 MPa - ABS: 40-55 MPa - Winner: ABS (37% higher on average)

Impact Strength (Notched Izod) - PP: 2-5 kJ/m² (brittle at low temperature) - ABS: 10-30 kJ/m² (good at low temperature) - Winner: ABS (significantly better)

Flexural Modulus - PP: 1.0-1.5 GPa - ABS: 2.0-2.5 GPa - Winner: ABS (stiffer)

Elongation at Break - PP: 100-600% (very flexible) - ABS: 10-50% (rigid) - Winner: PP (more ductile)

Heat Deflection Temperature - PP: 90-110°C (at 0.45 MPa) - ABS: 85-100°C (at 0.45 MPa) - Winner: PP (slightly better)

2. Chemical & Environmental Resistance

Chemical Resistance - PP: Excellent resistance to acids, bases, solvents. Only attacked by strong oxidizers and chlorinated solvents - ABS: Good resistance to acids, bases. Attacked by ketones, esters, and some hydrocarbons

Moisture Absorption - PP: < 0.01% (essentially zero) - ABS: 0.2-0.5% (requires drying before processing)

UV Resistance - PP: Poor (requires stabilizers for outdoor use) - ABS: Poor (requires stabilizers or paint for outdoor use)

Food Contact - PP: FDA compliant grades widely available - ABS: FDA compliant grades available but less common

Winner by Environment: - Wet/humid: PP (no moisture absorption) - Chemical exposure: PP (broader resistance) - Indoor dry: Either (no significant difference) - Outdoor: Neither (both need stabilization)

3. Processing Comparison

Melt Temperature - PP: 200-250°C - ABS: 210-250°C

Mold Temperature - PP: 20-60°C (fast cooling) - ABS: 50-80°C (better surface finish)

Drying Required - PP: No (hydrophobic) - ABS: Yes, 80°C for 2-4 hours

Shrinkage - PP: 1.0-2.5% (isotropic, high) - ABS: 0.4-0.7% (lower, better dimensional control)

Cycle Time - PP: Shorter (fast crystallization) - ABS: Moderate

Surface Finish - PP: Good but can have flow marks - ABS: Excellent (high gloss possible)

Processing Winner: - Speed: PP (faster cycles) - Dimensional precision: ABS (lower shrinkage) - Surface quality: ABS (better gloss) - Simplicity: PP (no drying needed)

4. Decision Framework

Choose PP When: - Low cost is the primary driver - Chemical resistance is critical - Moisture resistance is needed - Living hinges are required - High flexibility is desired - Food contact compliance is needed

Choose ABS When: - High impact strength is required - Good surface finish/appearance matters - Dimensional precision is critical - Low shrinkage needed for tight tolerances - Electroplating is required (ABS plateable) - Appliance housing application

When to Substitute: - ABS → PP: Acceptable if impact requirements are low and cost savings are significant - PP → ABS: Necessary when appearance, impact, or plating requirements demand it

Cost Comparison (typical, per kg): - PP: $1.00-1.50 - ABS: $1.80-2.50 - PP saves 30-40% on material cost

Related Products

💬
Request a Quote