|
The Science Bit
Commercial perfluoroelastomers are terpolymers of TFE (tetrafluoro-ethylene), PMVE (perfluoro-methylvinyl ether), and a cure site monomer. It is the fully-fluorinated (the ‘FF’ in FFKM) monomers in perfluoro-elastomers create extremely strong carbon=fluorine bonding, making the chemical structure virtually unbreakable, hence providing superior chemical resistance.

The polymer’s saturated backbone - no double bonds - means immunity from chemical attack by oxygen, ozone, UV light, or harsh chemicals. As a bonus, polymers with high levels of fluorine, as opposed to hydrogen, have proven to be more stable and less reactive.
|
|
Modern perfluoroelastomers can trace their lineage back to the late 60s, when chemists pioneered the combination of Teflon’s chemical resistance with Viton’s elasticity, creating a fully-fluorinated polymer that could be cross-linked. Early perfluoro-elastomers made use of bisphenol cross-links but this caused a high degree of compression set.
DP Seals moulds FFKM
DP Seals has created custom mouldings primarily from peroxide cross-linked FFKM. The company’s clients have exploited the main advantages of this compound - less compression set and higher strength at lower cost – in oil exploration, petroleum processing and automotive systems. Importantly, these compounds also offer benefits to DP Seals, particularly in terms of lower hydrogen fluoride gas production during the moulding process.
|
|
 DP Seals has delivered FFKM parts to customers’ specifications in automotive, oilfield and pipe line applications, enabling the company to get to grips with - and surmount -the problems this material presents. And on price: we currently appear to be less than half the price of our competition.
If you have a demanding rubber seal or moulding application and been frightened of using FFKM, talk to us. We deliver custom rubber mouldings at competitive prices.
|