文章: >Silicone Tensile Test vs Hardness Test: Complete Comparison Guide 2026

2026年3月26日

Silicone Tensile Test vs Hardness Test: Complete Comparison Guide 2026

In silicone rubber quality control, two of the most important mechanical tests are the silicone tensile test and the silicone hardness test. While both evaluate material performance, they measure completely different properties and serve different purposes in production and R&D.

This comprehensive guide compares silicone tensile testing vs hardness testing in detail — including principles, standards, equipment, advantages, limitations, and practical recommendations for manufacturers.

Table of Contents

1. Overview: Tensile Test vs Hardness Test

The hardness test quickly assesses how soft or hard a silicone is, while the tensile test provides comprehensive data on strength, elasticity, and toughness. Most quality systems use both tests together for full material characterization.

2. What Each Test Measures

Hardness Test (Shore A Durometer)

Measures the material’s resistance to indentation. It reflects surface stiffness and softness. Typical range for silicone rubber: 0 – 90 Shore A (most common 30–70 Shore A).

Tensile Test

Measures the force required to stretch a sample until it breaks. Key results include:

  • Tensile Strength (MPa)
  • Elongation at Break (%)
  • Modulus (stress-strain behavior)
Typical values for quality silicone: Tensile strength 4–12 MPa, elongation 300–800%+.

3. Test Principles and Methods

Hardness Test

A spring-loaded indenter (Shore A needle) is pressed into the silicone surface under constant force. The depth of penetration is converted into a hardness value. The test is fast, non-destructive, and ideal for quick checks.

Tensile Test

A standard dumbbell-shaped or straight silicone specimen is clamped in a universal testing machine and pulled at a constant speed (usually 500 mm/min) until breakage. The machine records the complete stress-strain curve.

4. Testing Standards and Sample Requirements

AspectHardness TestTensile Test
Common StandardsASTM D2240, ISO 48-4, GB/T 531ASTM D412, ISO 37, GB/T 528
Sample ShapeFlat piece, ≥6 mm thickDumbbell or straight strip, 1–3 mm thick
Test SpeedInstant readingUsually 500 mm/min
Destructive?Non-destructive / microFully destructive

5. Equipment Comparison

  • Hardness Test: Handheld or benchtop Shore A durometer. Low cost, portable, perfect for production line spot checks.
  • Tensile Test: Universal tensile testing machine (e.g., Instron type) with proper grips and extensometer. Higher cost, requires trained operators, used mainly in lab/QC department.

6. Advantages and Limitations

Hardness Test

Advantages: Very fast (seconds), low cost, non-destructive, excellent repeatability.
Limitations: Only measures surface hardness, cannot show overall strength or toughness.

Tensile Test

Advantages: Provides complete mechanical profile (strength + elasticity), highly relevant to real-world performance.
Limitations: Destructive, time-consuming, more expensive equipment and sample preparation.

7. When to Use Each Test in Production

  • Use Hardness Test for: Incoming raw material inspection, production line quick checks, batch consistency control, daily QC.
  • Use Tensile Test for: New material development, formulation validation, final product certification, failure analysis, customer audits.

Best practice: Perform hardness testing on every batch and tensile testing on critical or new formulations.

8. Relationship Between Tensile Properties and Hardness

Generally, higher Shore A hardness correlates with higher tensile strength but lower elongation at break. However, the relationship is not perfectly linear. Fumed silica reinforced silicone usually shows better balance in both tests compared to precipitated silica compounds.

9. FAQ – Silicone Tensile vs Hardness Testing

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Conclusion

Understanding the differences between silicone tensile testing and hardness testing is essential for effective quality control and product development. Hardness testing offers speed and convenience for routine checks, while tensile testing delivers the full mechanical performance picture required for critical applications.

Manufacturers who combine both tests consistently achieve better product reliability, fewer customer complaints, and stronger competitive advantage in the silicone industry.

Need help setting up your testing protocol? Leave a comment below with your specific application (medical, automotive, food-grade, etc.), and our technical team will be happy to provide tailored recommendations.

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Published: March 26, 2026 | Author: Silicone Technical Team
Original technical content. Feel free to share with proper attribution.

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