Nylons: Complete Guide to Nylon Materials

Nylon stands as one of the most commercially significant engineering thermoplastics ever developed, with annual global production exceeding 8 million metric tons. From its serendipitous discovery at DuPont’s experimental station to its ubiquity in modern manufacturing, nylon’s journey exemplifies how fundamental polymer science translates into practical engineering solutions. This comprehensive guide examines the full spectrum of nylon variants, their property profiles, processing characteristics, and industrial applications, drawing on our facility’s extensive experience in CNC machining and injection molding nylon components.

Nylons: Complete Guide to Nylon Types, Properties and Industrial Applications featured image
Nylons: Complete Guide to Nylon Types, Properties and Industrial Applications
Nylons: Complete Guide to Nylon Types, Properties and Industrial Applications illustration 1

The Complete Nylon Family Tree

The nylon family encompasses aliphatic polyamides designated by the number of carbon atoms in their monomer units. The naming convention indicates the diamine and diacid carbon counts for condensation polymers (e.g., PA 66 uses a 6-carbon diamine and 6-carbon diacid), or the lactam ring size for ring-opening polymers (e.g., PA 6 from caprolactam with 6 carbons). The following table catalogs the commercially significant nylon grades and their distinguishing characteristics.

Nylon Grade Monomer(s) Tm (°C) Tg (°C, dry) Key Feature
PA 6 Caprolactam 220 52 Best impact/surface balance
PA 66 HMDA + Adipic Acid 260 57 Higher strength/thermal resistance
PA 46 Diaminobutane + Adipic Acid 295 75 Highest Tm of aliphatic nylons
PA 11 11-Aminoundecanoic Acid 185 42 Bio-based (castor oil)
PA 12 Laurolactam 178 40 Lowest moisture absorption
PA 610 HMDA + Sebacic Acid 220 50 Good moisture/chemical balance
Nylons: Complete Guide to Nylon Types, Properties and Industrial Applications illustration 2

“>PA 612

HMDA + Dodecanedioic Acid 215 46 Good dimensional stability

PA 6 vs PA 66: The Engineering Workhorses Compared

PA 6 and PA 66 collectively represent approximately 85% of all nylon consumption, making the choice between them one of the most common material selection decisions in engineering thermoplastics.

Processing Differences

PA 6 processes at lower melt temperatures (230-260°C versus 270-290°C for PA 66) and exhibits better flow characteristics, reducing injection pressure requirements and enabling thinner wall sections. The narrower molecular weight distribution of PA 6 (from ring-opening polymerization) provides more consistent processing behavior across molding cycles. However, PA 6 crystallizes more slowly, requiring longer cooling times or higher mold temperat

Nylons: Complete Guide to Nylon Types, Properties and Industrial Applications illustration 3

ures to achieve optimal crystallinity.

Mechanical Performance

Dry PA 66 offers approximately 10-15% higher tensile strength and modulus compared to PA 6, primarily due to its higher crystallinity (35-45% vs 25-35%) and closer chain packing enabled by the more regular repeat unit structure. However, after moisture conditioning to equilibrium at 50% RH, this performance gap narrows considerably. The plasticizing effect of absorbed water reduces PA 66 tensile strength to roughly equivalent levels as conditioned PA 6, though PA 66 retains a stiffness advantage of approximately 15-20%.

Comprehensive Mechanical Properties by Nylon Grade

Property PA 6 (Dry/Cond) PA 66 (Dry/Cond) PA 12 (Dry) PA 6 GF30 PA 66 GF30
Tensile Strength (MPa) 79 / 50 83 / 58 45 190 200
Tensile Modulus (GPa) 2.8 / 1.2 3.2 / 1.5 1.4 9.5 10.5
Flexural Modulus (GPa) 2.6 / 0.9 2.9 / 1.2 1.2 8.5 9.5
Notched Izod (J/m) 53 / NB 43 / 120 Nylons: Complete Guide to Nylon Types, Properties and Industrial Applications illustration 4

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110 100
HDT @ 1.8 MPa (°C) 68 / – 90 / – 52 210 250
Water Absorption @ Sat. (%) 2.7 2.3 0.25 1.5 1.2

The Moisture Challenge: Understanding Nylon’s Hydrophilic Nature

All polyamides absorb moisture from the environment due to hydrogen bonding between water molecules and amide groups in the polymer backbone. This moisture absorption profoundly affects mechanical properties, dimensional stability, and processing behavior — effects that must be accounted for in design and material selection.

Mechanism and Magnitude

The density of amide linkages determines equilibrium moisture content. PA 6, with one amide group per six backbone carbons, absorbs the most water (2.7% at saturation, approximately 2.5% at 50% RH). PA 66 absorbs slightly less (2.3% at saturation) due to higher crystallinity and tighter chain packing. PA 12, with one amide group per twelve backbone carbons, absorbs only 0.25% at saturation — an order of magnitude less than PA 6.

Property Effects

Absorbed water acts as a plasticizer, reducing glass transition temperature (from approximately 52°C dry to below 0°C saturated for PA 6) and improving impact resistance substantially. This explains why dry nylon is relatively brittle while conditioned nylon is remarkably tough. However, the plasticization also reduces tensile strength and stiffness by 30-40%, and dimensional changes of 0.3-0.8% in the flow direction and 0.5-1.5% in the transverse direction are typical for PA 6 reaching equilibrium moisture.

Processing Nylon: Best Practices for Injection Molding and CNC Machining

Injection Molding Nylon

Successful nylon injection molding begins with proper drying. PA 6 and PA 66 must be dried to less than 0.15% moisture (typically 4-6 hours at 80°C using desiccant dryers) to prevent hydrolytic degradation during processing. Melt temperature should be 230-260°C for PA 6 and 270-290°C for PA 66, with mold temperature maintained at 80-90°C to promote surface crystallinity and achieve consistent dimensions. Post-molding conditioning — exposing parts to ambient humidity or controlled moisture environments — is often necessary to achieve equilibrium moisture content and stabilize dimensions before precision assembly.

CNC Machining Nylon Components

Nylon’s excellent machinability makes it a preferred material for precision components produced by CNC machining. Unfilled nylon grades machine with sharp carbide tooling, producing continuous chips that require effective evacuation to prevent re-cutting and surface degradation. Key machining parameters differ significantly between grades and filler content:

For unfilled PA 6 and PA 66, surface speeds of 150-250 m/min with feed rates of 0.1-0.3 mm/rev using carbide tooling with positive rake angles (10-15°) typically produce excellent surface finishes. Water-based coolants should generally be avoided for precision work, as they cause dimensional swelling. Glass-filled grades (PA 6 GF30, PA 66 GF30) require diamond-coated or PCD tooling, with surface speeds reduced to 80-150 m/min to manage abrasive wear. The glass fibers cause tool edge rounding that progressively degrades surface finish and dimensional accuracy.

Industrial Applications and Material Selection

Automotive Applications

Nylon is the dominant engineering thermoplastic in automotive applications, with typical passenger vehicles containing 20-25 kg of nylon components. Under-hood applications — including engine covers, intake manifolds, radiator end tanks, and rocker covers — primarily use PA 66 and PA 66 GF30 for their superior thermal resistance and strength. Interior components including pedals, door handles, and seat belt components predominantly use PA 6 for its better surface appearance and lower cost.

Industrial Machinery

Nylon gears, bearings, rollers, and wear pads are ubiquitous in industrial machinery. Cast PA 6 grades incorporating oil, MoS₂, or solid lubricant fillers provide self-lubricating properties that extend component life in unlubricated applications. PA 12 and PA 11 are preferred for precision bearings operating in variable humidity environments where dimensional stability is critical.

Electrical and Electronics

PA 66 is the preferred nylon for electrical connectors, circuit breakers, and coil bobbins due to its superior dielectric strength and tracking resistance. Glass-filled and mineral-filled grades provide the stiffness and dimensional stability required for precision connector housings. Recent halogen-free, flame-retardant nylon formulations address growing regulatory requirements for electrical component materials.

Conclusion: Selecting the Right Nylon for Your Application

The nylon family offers unparalleled versatility across a spectrum of mechanical, thermal, and cost requirements. PA 6 provides the best balance of processability, surface finish, and economics for general-purpose applications. PA 66’s superior thermal and mechanical performance justifies its modest cost premium for demanding engineering applications. Glass-filled grades deliver dramatic improvements in stiffness and thermal resistance for structural components. And PA 12 remains the material of choice when dimensional stability in varying environments cannot be compromised.

At nylonplastic.com, our engineering team specializes in matching the right nylon grade to specific application requirements, drawing on decades of combined experience in nylon processing and component manufacturing. Whether your project requires high-volume injection molding or precision CNC machining of custom nylon components, understanding the material options available is the first step toward optimized manufacturing outcomes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between polyamide and nylon?

Polyamide is the broad chemical family of polymers containing amide linkages, while nylon is a subset of aliphatic polyamides that originated as a DuPont trademark. All nylons are polyamides, but not all polyamides are nylon — aromatic polyamides like Kevlar and Nomex are polyamides but are never classified as nylon.

How does moisture absorption affect nylon material properties?

Moisture acts as a plasticizer in nylon, reducing glass transition temperature and tensile strength by 15-40% while increasing impact resistance dramatically. PA 6 absorbs approximately 2.7% moisture at saturation, while PA 12 absorbs only 0.25%. This moisture sensitivity must be accounted for in dimensional tolerance specifications.

Can nylon and polyamide components be CNC machined?

Yes, unfilled nylon grades machine excellently with sharp carbide tooling at moderate speeds. Glass-filled grades require diamond-coated tooling due to abrasive wear. PA 12 offers the best combination of machinability and dimensional stability. Water-based coolants should be avoided for precision work as they cause swelling.

What are the main industrial applications for nylon materials?

Nylon is used extensively in automotive (engine covers, intake manifolds, gears), industrial machinery (bearings, rollers, wear pads), electrical components (connectors, circuit breakers), and consumer products (power tools, sporting goods). Nylon fabric dominates hosiery, activewear, carpet, and technical textile applications.

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