THE ART AND SCIENCE OF ELASTOMERS
Built on real industrial experience, this masterclass bridges theory and production reality, offering insights that go beyond textbooks and into the core of rubber manufacturing.

Chapter 4
Rubber vs Plastic vs Thermoplastics
Rubber. Plastic. Thermoplastics.
They surround us, sealing, shaping, protecting, packaging.
At first glance they seem alike, but their structures tell very different stories.
Rubber is an elastomer, a polymer of long, flexible chains, permanently bonded together through vulcanization. Those bonds give rubber its defining trait: stretch it, compress it, twist it, it returns to shape, again and again.
Plastics are different. Most are rigid polymers, engineered to hold their form. Polypropylene, polyethylene, PVC, they provide structure and stability. Push them too far and they don’t rebound. They crack, shatter, or warp.
Within plastics lies a special family: thermoplastics. These soften when heated and harden when cooled, without chemical change. They can be melted, molded, reshaped and recycled over and over. Perfect for injection molding, electronics housings and consumer packaging.
Rubber, by contrast, is a thermoset. Once vulcanized, its structure is locked. It won’t melt or flow. Heat it too much and it breaks down. But that permanence is exactly why rubber excels where plastics fail, in high heat, high pressure, high vibration environments.
Each material brings its own strengths. Thermoplastics offer speed, recyclability and complex geometry. Rigid plastics deliver lightweight structure. But only rubber provides true elasticity, vibration isolation and long-term resilience.
Understanding these differences is key to engineering the right solution. Because when the job demands flexibility, sealing, or shock absorption, rubber doesn’t just compete. It outlasts.

