Chemical Resistance Reference

O-Ring Chemical Compatibility Guide

Choosing the wrong O-ring material for a chemical environment can cause seal failure within hours, leading to leaks, contamination, and costly downtime. This comprehensive guide helps you match the right O-ring material to your chemical exposure.

Understanding Chemical Attack

How Chemicals Affect O-Ring Materials

When an O-ring contacts a chemical fluid, one of three things can happen depending on the material-chemical compatibility:

1. Swelling: The chemical is absorbed into the rubber, causing it to expand. Moderate swelling (up to 15-20%) can actually help the seal by increasing contact pressure. Excessive swelling causes extrusion, gap leakage, and eventual seal failure. 2. Shrinkage & Hardening: Plasticizers and softeners are extracted from the rubber by the chemical, causing the O-ring to shrink and harden. This leads to loss of sealing pressure, leakage, and eventual brittle failure. 3. Chemical Degradation: The chemical attacks the polymer backbone itself, breaking the molecular chains. This causes cracking, loss of mechanical properties, and rapid failure. This is the most dangerous form of chemical attack.

Temperature dramatically accelerates chemical attack. A chemical that causes slow, acceptable swelling at 25°C may cause rapid failure at 80°C. As a rule of thumb, the rate of chemical attack doubles with every 10°C temperature increase. Always test at your actual operating temperature, not just at room temperature.

Critical Warning: The Two Most Common O-Ring Material Mistakes

Mistake #1: Using Silicone O-rings for oil applications — Silicone swells and degrades rapidly in any petroleum-based oil. Always use NBR or Viton for oil.
Mistake #2: Using EPDM O-rings for oil applications — EPDM has poor oil resistance and will swell excessively. EPDM is for water, steam, and outdoor use, not oil.
Mistake #3: Using NBR O-rings for high-temperature applications above 120°C — NBR hardens and cracks above its thermal limit. Switch to Viton or Silicone.

Chemical Resistance Chart

O-Ring Chemical Compatibility Quick Reference

E = Excellent    G = Good    F = Fair (Use with caution)    P = Poor (Not recommended)

Chemical / FluidNitrile (NBR)Viton (FKM)Silicone (VMQ)EPDMNeoprene (CR)
Mineral Oils (Hydraulic, Lube)EEPPG
Engine Oil (SAE)EEPPG
Diesel FuelEEPPG
Gasoline (Petrol)GEPPF
Kerosene / Jet FuelGEPPF
Brake Fluid (DOT 3/4 Glycol)PPFEF
Brake Fluid (DOT 5 Silicone)FFEFF
Power Steering FluidEEPPG
ATF (Automatic Trans Fluid)EEPPG
Water (Cold)EEEEE
Water (Hot, >80°C)GGEEG
SteamPFGEF
Sulfuric Acid (Dilute)FEFEF
Hydrochloric Acid (Dilute)FEFEF
Nitric Acid (Dilute)PEPGP
Sodium Hydroxide (Caustic)FGFEG
Ammonia GasFFGEG
Acetone (Ketone)PPPEF
MEK (Methyl Ethyl Ketone)PPPGP
Isopropyl Alcohol (IPA)GEGEG
Ethanol / MethanolGEFEG
Toluene / XyleneFEPPP
Propane / Butane (LPG)EEFPG
Natural GasEEFFG
Oxygen GasF*F*E*G*F*
OzonePEEEE
UV / Sunlight (Weathering)PGEEG
Freon / Refrigerant R-22EEFGG
Phosphate Ester (Skydrol)PFPEP
Food / Dairy / Edible OilsGP*EGF

* Special formulations required for oxygen service (clean, inert, no oil traces). * Standard Viton not FDA compliant - use food-grade Silicone. Ratings are general guidelines at room temperature. Actual compatibility varies with temperature, pressure, and exposure time.

By Chemical Category

O-Ring Selection by Chemical Category

Petroleum Oils & Fuels

Includes: Hydraulic Oil, Engine Oil, Diesel, Gasoline, ATF, Grease

Best Choice: NBR (Nitrile) — The most cost-effective material with excellent resistance to all petroleum-based fluids. For standard temperatures up to 120°C, NBR is the ideal choice.

High-Temp Choice: Viton (FKM) — For oil temperatures above 120°C or for aggressive aromatic fuels, Viton provides superior performance up to 200°C.

Avoid: Silicone and EPDM — Both materials swell and fail rapidly in petroleum fluids. Never use silicone or EPDM O-rings with oil.

🔑 Pro Tip

For standard hydraulic systems operating below 120°C, NBR O-rings with 70-90 Shore A hardness are the most reliable and cost-effective choice. Only upgrade to Viton if you experience NBR failure due to heat or chemical attack.

Water, Steam & Coolants

Includes: Hot/Cold Water, Steam, Glycol Coolants, Radiator Fluid

Best Choice: EPDM — The premier material for water, steam, and ethylene glycol-based coolants. Excellent hot water resistance up to 100°C and steam resistance (intermittent).

Alternative: Silicone — Good for hot water and steam applications up to 230°C where FDA compliance is needed.

Avoid: NBR in hot water/steam — NBR has limited hot water resistance and will degrade over time above 80°C in water.

Acids, Alkalis & Harsh Chemicals

Includes: Sulfuric Acid, Hydrochloric Acid, Sodium Hydroxide, Caustic Solutions

Best Choice: Viton (FKM) — Outstanding resistance to a wide range of acids and chemicals. Viton is the standard for chemical processing applications.

For Strong Oxidizers: EPDM — EPDM offers excellent resistance to caustic solutions and some acids. Useful for alkali and acid handling in water treatment.

Extreme Conditions: FFKM — When all other materials fail, FFKM provides near-universal chemical resistance up to 320°C.

Gases & Refrigerants

Includes: Natural Gas, LPG, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Refrigerants

Natural Gas / LPG: NBR — Excellent resistance to hydrocarbons in gas phase. NBR is the standard for natural gas compression seals.

Refrigerants (R-22, R-134a, R-410a): NBR — Good compatibility with most common refrigerants. Always confirm specific refrigerant compatibility.

Oxygen Service: Special Silicone or EPDM — Requires specially cleaned, non-oil-containing formulations to prevent combustion.

Oxygen Safety Warning

O-ring materials for oxygen service must be specially formulated and thoroughly cleaned to remove any traces of oil or hydrocarbons. Standard O-rings can ignite in high-pressure oxygen. Always specify "oxygen-clean" O-rings for oxygen applications.

Outdoor / Environmental Exposure

Includes: UV Radiation, Ozone, Weathering, Salt Spray

Best Choice: EPDM or Silicone — Both materials have outstanding resistance to UV, ozone, and weathering. They are the standard for outdoor sealing applications.

Good Alternative: Neoprene (CR) — Offers good weather resistance with better oil resistance than EPDM, making it useful for outdoor equipment that may contact oil.

Poor Choice: NBR — NBR degrades rapidly in sunlight and ozone. Never use NBR for outdoor applications without UV protection.

Chemical Failure Warning Signs

How to Spot Chemical Attack on O-Rings

When an O-ring is chemically incompatible with the fluid it's sealing, it will show one or more of these visible signs. Recognizing these signs early can prevent equipment damage and production downtime.

Excessive Swelling

If the O-ring has expanded beyond its original dimensions and feels soft or spongy, the material has absorbed too much fluid. This leads to extrusion and leakage.

Shrinkage & Hardening

If the O-ring has become smaller, harder, or brittle, plasticizers have been extracted by the fluid. The seal will lose compression and leak.

Discoloration

Change in color of the O-ring indicates chemical attack. Black NBR turning brown, viton turning black, or any surface staining indicates incompatibility.

Surface Cracking

Visible cracks, crazing, or checking on the O-ring surface indicates chemical degradation of the polymer. Immediate replacement is required.

Sticky / Tacky Surface

A gummy, sticky surface indicates severe chemical attack. The O-ring has begun to dissolve and will fail completely very soon.

Weight Change

Weigh the O-ring before and after exposure. A weight change of more than 15-20% indicates serious chemical incompatibility.

Need Help?

Unsure Which Material to Choose for Your Chemical?

Our technical team has 15+ years of experience in O-ring material selection for thousands of chemical applications. Send us your details and we'll recommend the optimal material within 24 hours.

Get Chemical Compatibility Recommendation Revisit Materials Guide

Need Chemically Compatible O-Rings?

All materials, all sizes. Factory direct pricing with material certification.

Get Quote Back to O-Rings