Selecting the right flame retardant plastic requires understanding multiple standards, test methods, and application requirements. This guide covers UL94, LOI, IEC 60335, and halogen-free considerations.
1. UL94 Flame Ratings Explained
UL94 is the most common flame retardancy standard for plastics. It classifies materials based on their burning behavior in vertical (V) and horizontal (H) test configurations.
Vertical Burning (V-0, V-1, V-2) - V-0: Best rating. Extinguishes within 10 seconds, no flaming drips - V-1: Extinguishes within 30 seconds, no flaming drips - V-2: Extinguishes within 30 seconds, allows flaming drips
Horizontal Burning (HB) - HB: Slow burning, < 40 mm/min for thickness 3-13mm
5VA / 5VB - More stringent than V-0, uses larger flame source - 5VA: No hole formation - 5VB: Allows hole formation
Selection Criteria: - Electrical enclosures: V-0 minimum - Thin-wall parts: Check rating at specific thickness - Drip concern: Avoid V-2 for electrical applications
2. Limiting Oxygen Index (LOI)
LOI measures the minimum oxygen concentration required to sustain combustion. Higher LOI indicates better flame retardancy.
LOI Values: - 21%: Air (no flame retardancy) - 22-25%: Self-extinguishing - 26-28%: Good flame retardancy - 29-32%: Excellent flame retardancy - >32%: Superior flame retardancy
LOI vs UL94 Correlation: - LOI > 28% typically achieves V-0 - LOI 26-28% typically achieves V-1 or V-2 - LOI < 26% may only achieve HB
Note: LOI is a material property test, not a product rating. Use UL94 for regulatory compliance.
3. Halogen-Free Flame Retardants
Halogen-free flame retardants avoid bromine and chlorine, addressing environmental and toxicity concerns.
Halogen-Free Technologies: - Phosphorus-based: Effective for engineering plastics - Metal hydroxides (ATH, MDH): High loading required - Nitrogen-based: Synergistic with phosphorus - Intumescent: Form protective char layer
Advantages: - Lower smoke density - Less toxic combustion products - RoHS compliant - WEEE directive friendly
Trade-offs: - Higher loading (30-60% vs 10-20% for halogenated) - May affect mechanical properties - Processability challenges - Higher cost
When to Choose Halogen-Free: - Public transport (rail, aviation) - Building materials (strict smoke requirements) - Consumer electronics (brand requirements) - Wire and cable (IEC 6724)
4. IEC 60335-1 Requirements
IEC 60335-1 is the safety standard for household appliances, specifying flame retardancy requirements for non-metallic parts.
Key Requirements: - Parts supporting live parts: GWIT 850°C or GWFI 675°C - Other parts: GWFI 550°C minimum - Or UL94 V-0 / V-1 equivalent
Glow Wire Tests: - GWIT (Glow Wire Ignition Temperature): Temperature at which material ignites - GWFI (Glow Wire Flammability Index): Temperature at which material extinguishes within 30s
Material Selection: - FR-ABS: GWIT 850°C, GWFI 675°C ✓ - FR-PP (halogen-free): GWIT 775°C, GWFI 650°C (check application) - FR-PA6: GWIT 850°C, GWFI 675°C ✓
Additional Requirements: - CTI (Comparative Tracking Index): >175V for live parts - Ball Pressure Test: Resistance at 125°C or 75°C
5. Application-Specific Selection
Electrical Enclosures (Switch Boxes, Circuit Breakers) - Material: FR-ABS, FR-PP, FR-PA6 - Rating: UL94 V-0 @ 1.5mm minimum - CTI: >175V - Consider: GWIT 850°C for IEC 60335
Automotive Interior - Material: PP-FR, TPO-FR - Rating: FMVSS 302 (horizontal burn < 100mm/min) - Consider: Low VOC, odor requirements
Consumer Electronics - Material: FR-ABS, FR-PC/ABS - Rating: UL94 V-0 @ 1.5mm - Consider: Halogen-free for brand requirements
Wire & Cable - Material: PVC-FR, PE-FR, TPU-FR - Rating: IEC 60332 series - Consider: Smoke density (IEC 61034), acidity (IEC 60754)
Building Materials - Material: FR-PP, FR-PE, FR-ABS - Rating: EN 13501-1 (Euroclass B, C, D) - Consider: Smoke class (s1, s2, s3), droplet class (d0, d1, d2)