When sourcing high-performance engineering plastics, PEEK (Polyetheretherketone) and PI (Polyimide) are often compared side by side. Both are “star materials” in the high-temperature specialty plastics category, but choosing the wrong one can hurt product performance and waste budget. Here are 5 key dimensions to guide your decision.
1. Temperature Resistance: PI Has the Edge
PEEK offers a continuous service temperature around 250°C, with short-term exposure up to 300°C. PI can withstand 260-300°C continuously, with some grades enduring over 400°C briefly. If your operating conditions consistently exceed 280°C, PI is the safer bet. Below 250°C, PEEK performs just fine — and at a better price point.
2. Mechanical Properties: PEEK Wins on Balance
PEEK outperforms PI in toughness and impact resistance. PI is harder and more rigid but inherently brittle with poor impact performance. For dynamic loads or impact-prone applications like seals and bearings, PEEK is more reliable. PI is better suited for static loads and high-precision dimensional stability.
3. Chemical Resistance: PEEK Covers More Ground
PEEK resists virtually all organic solvents and acids/bases (except concentrated sulfuric acid). PI also has good chemical resistance but degrades in strong alkalis and some polar solvents. If your application involves diverse chemical media, PEEK provides a wider safety margin.
4. Processability: PEEK Has a Clear Advantage
PEEK can be processed via injection molding and extrusion — standard thermoplastic methods with high efficiency and good precision. Most PI grades are thermoset or pseudo-thermoplastic, requiring compression molding/sintering or CNC machining, which takes longer and costs more. For small batches the gap narrows, but at volume PEEK’s processability advantage is decisive.
5. Cost: Think Total Lifecycle
PI raw material costs are typically 1.5-3× that of PEEK, with higher processing costs too. But if your application demands temperatures above 280°C, substituting PEEK may cause premature failure — a false economy. Don’t compare unit prices alone; calculate total lifecycle cost.
Practical Selection Guide
| Scenario | Recommended | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Seals/bearings ≤250°C | PEEK | Best all-around performance, easy processing, cost-effective |
| Static parts at 260-300°C | PI | Higher temp rating, excellent dimensional stability |
| Harsh chemical environments | PEEK | Broader chemical compatibility |
| High-precision electronics | PI | High rigidity, low creep |
| High-volume injection molding | PEEK | Thermoplastic processing efficiency |
Conclusion
In short: for temperatures ≤250°C where toughness and processability matter, choose PEEK. For higher temperatures where rigidity and dimensional stability are critical, go with PI. When in doubt, run simulation tests before bulk purchasing.
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