TPR Vs TPU Key Differences for Material Performance
December 11, 2025
In the world of engineering plastics, selecting the right material for specific applications often challenges designers and engineers. Thermoplastic Rubber (TPR) and Thermoplastic Polyurethane (TPU) stand as two widely used thermoplastic elastomers, each with distinct characteristics that make them suitable for different applications. This article provides an in-depth comparison of their material properties, performance differences, and practical applications to guide informed material selection.
Thermoplastic Rubber (TPR) represents a copolymer consisting of polystyrene (PS) and an elastomeric mid-block (typically butadiene-based). Developed to combine the advantages of synthetic rubber with the processing benefits of thermoplastics, TPR typically refers to styrenic block copolymers like SBS or SEBS. These materials contain approximately 30% polystyrene by weight, with the remainder being the elastomeric mid-block.
TPR offers excellent fatigue resistance, chemical stability, impact strength, and moderate recyclability. Unlike traditional rubber that requires vulcanization, TPR materials feature polystyrene hard segments that act as physical cross-links within the continuous elastomer phase. The butadiene components provide flexibility while the rigid polystyrene regions maintain structural integrity.
While TPR shows limitations in heat resistance, dynamic fatigue performance, and abrasion resistance (making it unsuitable for tire applications), SEBS-based TPR demonstrates superior ozone resistance, weather resistance, and UV stability compared to many unsaturated rubbers. However, vulcanized EPDM generally outperforms TPR in long-term outdoor durability.
Thermoplastic Polyurethane (TPU) encompasses a broad range of polyurethane polymers offering elasticity, transparency, abrasion resistance, and excellent oil resistance. TPU's unique molecular structure features alternating hard and soft polymer segments, providing both strength and flexibility.
By adjusting molecular weights and component ratios, manufacturers can produce TPU variants with significantly different properties from chemically similar materials. The hard segments form pseudo-crystalline regions through intermolecular attraction, acting as cross-linking elements that explain TPU's high modulus of elasticity. Meanwhile, longer, softer chains moderate this effect, allowing production of materials with varying hardness/elasticity.
TPU demonstrates full thermoplastic behavior suitable for injection molding, though recycling processes may degrade chain integrity. When heated beyond the glass transition temperature of harder components, the cross-linking effect diminishes completely.
| Property | TPR (Metric) | TPU (Metric) |
|---|---|---|
| Hardness, Shore D | ~10–70 | ~55–85 |
| Tensile Strength, Ultimate | 2–35 MPa | 28.0–96.0 MPa |
| Tensile Strength, Yield | 1–5 MPa | 52–80 MPa |
| Elastic Modulus | 0.02–0.68 GPa | 0.62–5.50 GPa |
| Flexural Yield Strength | 2.66–24.1 MPa | 19.0–95.1 MPa |
| Flexural Modulus | 0.0917–0.814 GPa | 0.520–4.50 GPa |
| Taber Abrasion, mg/1000 cycles | 30–800 | 5–25 |
| Melting Point | 104–191°C | 185–243°C |
| Coefficient of Linear Thermal Expansion | 110–170 µm/m°C | 14–56 µm/m°C |
The data reveals TPU generally outperforms TPR in tensile strength, elastic modulus, flexural strength, and abrasion resistance, while TPR may offer advantages in cost and thermal expansion coefficient. Both materials overlap in hardness range, though TPU can achieve higher hardness levels.
- TPR Applications: Toys, footwear components, seals, wire and cable insulation, and automotive parts benefit from TPR's flexibility and easy processing.
- TPU Applications: Mobile device cases, athletic shoe soles, medical equipment, automotive interiors, and industrial hoses utilize TPU's superior abrasion resistance, oil resistance, and high strength.
Both TPR and TPU originate from petrochemical resources, facing similar sustainability and recycling challenges. While TPU allows mechanical recycling, the process typically reduces molecular weight and mechanical properties due to thermal degradation. Conventional petroleum-based TPU doesn't biodegrade under normal landfill or composting conditions, though specialty bio-based or modified TPU variants with degradable segments are emerging.
TPR also permits mechanical recycling but typically results in lower-grade materials with diminished performance. Like most conventional plastics, TPR degrades very slowly in natural environments. Research continues into algae-derived monomers for TPR production.
TPR generally offers better cost efficiency than TPU, with prices typically ranging from $1.60 to $2.00 per kilogram compared to TPU's $3.00 to $6.00 per kilogram range (varying by grade and performance requirements). For applications without stringent performance demands, TPR often presents a more economical choice.
- Thermoplastic Vulcanizates (TPE-V or TPV)
- Thermoplastic Polyolefins (TPE-O or TPO)
- Thermoplastic Copolyesters (TPE-E, COPE, or TEEE)
- Thermoplastic Polyether Block Amides (TPE-A)
- Styrenic Block Copolymers (TPE-S)
- Melt Processable Rubbers (MPR)
- Fluoroelastomers (FKM, FFKM)
When thermoset polymers represent viable options, additional material choices become available:
- Vulcanized Natural Rubber (NR)
- Polyisoprene (IR)
- Polychloroprene (CR)
- Polybutadiene (BR)
- Nitrile (Butadiene) Rubber (NBR)
- Performance Requirements: Evaluate needs for tensile strength, abrasion resistance, oil resistance, and weather resistance.
- Processing Methods: Consider compatibility with manufacturing processes like injection molding or extrusion.
- Budget Constraints: Balance performance needs with cost-effectiveness.
- Environmental Factors: Assess requirements for weather resistance and chemical stability.
- Sustainability Goals: Prioritize recyclable or bio-based materials when possible.
TPR and TPU both represent excellent thermoplastic elastomer options, each with distinct advantages and limitations. By thoroughly understanding their material properties, application suitability, and performance characteristics—while carefully evaluating specific project requirements—engineers and designers can make optimal material selections that deliver the best performance and value for their applications.

