Fumed Silica in Silicone Rubber: Reinforcement Mechanism and Grade Selection

Silicone Grade Sourcing

Looking for PDMS-treated fumed silica for silicone compounds? Get pricing and spec sheets.

Request Samples
Tech Guide · Silicone Rubber

Fumed Silica in Silicone Rubber: Reinforcement Mechanism and Grade Selection

Without reinforcing filler, unfilled silicone rubber has tensile strength below 1 MPa — barely usable. Fumed silica transforms it into a material with 5–12 MPa tensile strength and excellent tear resistance. This guide explains the reinforcement mechanism, the role of surface treatment, and how to select the right grade for HTV and RTV silicone systems.

Silicone RubberHTV SiliconeRTV SiliconeReinforcementPDMS Treatment

How Fumed Silica Reinforces Silicone Rubber

Silicone polymer (polydimethylsiloxane, PDMS) is inherently weak because its Si–O backbone is very flexible and the polymer chains have low intermolecular forces. Fumed silica reinforces it through two complementary mechanisms:

Physical Filler Networking (Payne Effect)

At high loadings (20–50 phr), silica particles form a percolating network within the rubber matrix. This network bears load at small strains, dramatically increasing modulus and hardness. At large strains (stretching), the network breaks, showing the characteristic nonlinear “Payne effect” — modulus decreases with strain amplitude.

Polymer-Filler Interaction

PDMS chains adsorb strongly onto fumed silica surface silanol groups, forming a “bound rubber” layer that does not desorb under normal processing conditions. This immobilized polymer layer acts as a cross-link equivalent — it transmits stress between the silica network and the free polymer chains, increasing tear strength and elongation at break.

Why fumed silica specifically? Precipitated silica and calcium carbonate can also reinforce silicone, but fumed silica — with its high surface area (90–400 m²/g), non-porous structure, and precisely controlled aggregate morphology — provides the highest tensile strength per gram of filler. It is the preferred reinforcing filler for all high-performance silicone applications.

Effect on Mechanical Properties

Property Unfilled Silicone With 30 phr Fumed Silica With 50 phr Fumed Silica
Tensile Strength (MPa)<16–98–12
Elongation at Break (%)100–200300–500200–400
Shore A Hardness10–2040–5555–70
Tear Strength (kN/m)<515–2520–35
Compression Set (%)HighModerateLow–Moderate

HTV vs RTV Silicone: Different Requirements

HTV (High Temperature Vulcanization)

Used in extruded/molded silicone products (tubing, gaskets, seals). Processed at 150–200 °C under pressure. Fumed silica loading: 25–50 phr. Requires high-surface-area grades (150–200 m²/g) for maximum reinforcement. Pre-treated (PDMS-treated or in-situ HMDS) grades preferred to prevent crepe hardening.

RTV (Room Temperature Vulcanization)

Used in sealants, encapsulants, potting compounds. Cures at ambient temperature (condensation or addition cure). Fumed silica loading: 5–20 phr (thixotropy control) or 20–40 phr (reinforced elastomer). Lower BET grades (90–150 m²/g) preferred — easier dispersion without high-shear compounding equipment.

Crepe Hardening in HTV: Untreated (hydrophilic) fumed silica causes “crepe hardening” — the compound stiffens and becomes unprocessable over time as the silanol groups form hydrogen bonds with the PDMS chains. This is why HTV compounds always use pre-treated or in-situ treated fumed silica. RTV systems are less susceptible due to lower viscosity and shorter shelf life before cure.

Surface Treatment: Why It Matters in Silicone

The key to preventing crepe hardening and maintaining processability is controlling the silanol-PDMS interaction. Three approaches are used:

  1. Pre-Treated Fumed Silica (PDMS-Coated)

    Grades like Aerosil R202 and Wacker HDK H20 are pre-treated with PDMS at the factory. The PDMS coating on the silica surface is compatible with the silicone matrix — it reduces the number of free silanols available to form rigid bonds with the polymer. This gives excellent shelf stability of the compound and predictable processing. Highest cost option; most convenient.

  2. In-Situ Treatment with HMDS

    Hexamethyldisilazane (HMDS) is added directly to the Sigma mixer or two-roll mill during compounding along with untreated fumed silica. At compounding temperature (150–160 °C), HMDS reacts with silanols, converting them to trimethylsilyl groups in real time. Requires addition of small amount of water to catalyze the reaction. Lower cost than pre-treated grades; widely used in HTV production.

  3. Silanol-Functional PDMS Fluid Treatment

    Adding a silanol-terminated PDMS fluid (typically 0.5–2 phr) alongside untreated fumed silica competes for silanol sites on the silica surface, partially blocking crepe hardening. This is a lower-cost approach but provides less consistent protection than HMDS or pre-treatment. Used in less demanding RTV applications.

Grade Selection for Silicone Applications

Application System Recommended Grade BET (m²/g) Loading (phr)
High-strength HTV (seals, gaskets) HTV peroxide cure Aerosil R202 / HDK H20 100 ± 20 30–50
HTV compound (in-situ HMDS) HTV peroxide cure Aerosil 200 + HMDS 200 ± 25 25–45
LSR (Liquid Silicone Rubber) Addition cure, injection molded Aerosil R202 / R972 100–150 20–40
RTV-1 sealant (acetoxy/neutral) Condensation cure Aerosil R202 / HDK H20 100 ± 20 5–15
RTV-2 sealant/encapsulant Addition cure (Pt) Aerosil R972 / R202 110–150 8–20
Silicone potting compound Addition cure, low viscosity Aerosil R972 110 ± 20 3–8
Silicone foam HTV or RTV Aerosil R202 100 ± 20 15–30
Why lower BET (90–150 m²/g) for silicone vs. higher BET for coatings? In silicone systems, the goal is reinforcement through polymer-filler interaction and aggregate networking, not solution-phase hydrogen bonding. Lower BET grades have larger aggregates with higher structure — more branched chains that entangle with polymer. Higher BET grades (300–380 m²/g) are harder to compound and can reduce elongation at break by creating excessive cross-link density.

Compounding Best Practices

HTV Compounding Equipment

HTV silicone compounds are mixed in a sigma (Z-blade) mixer or on a two-roll mill. A typical sigma mixer compounding cycle:

  • Charge PDMS gum polymer into mixer
  • Add 50% of fumed silica; mix at 80–100 °C for 15 min
  • Add HMDS (if in-situ treatment); add water catalyst (0.5–1 phr); continue mixing 15 min at 150–160 °C
  • Add remaining 50% fumed silica; mix additional 30–45 min
  • Add crosslinker, catalyst, and other additives on the two-roll mill at room temperature
  • Post-heat treatment (150–200 °C, 2–4 h) to remove residual HMDS byproducts (ammonia)

RTV Compounding

RTV systems are mixed at ambient or mild temperatures using planetary mixers, dual asymmetric centrifuge (SpeedMixer), or high-speed dissolvers. Key points:

  • Add fumed silica to Part A (base polymer) only — never to the catalyst/crosslinker side
  • Use pre-treated grades (R202) to avoid stability issues in one-pack systems
  • Mix under vacuum to eliminate air entrainment before packaging
  • For addition-cure (Pt catalyst) systems: even trace amounts of amine or sulfur from HMDS treatment can poison the Pt catalyst — always use R202 (PDMS-treated) rather than HMDS-treated grades in addition-cure formulations
Platinum Catalyst Poisoning: HMDS-treated fumed silica can leave residual nitrogen compounds that inhibit platinum addition-cure catalysts. Always use PDMS-treated grades (R202, HDK H20) in addition-cure RTV systems. If HMDS grades are necessary, post-heat at 200 °C for 4+ hours before use to drive off residual amines.

Sourcing PDMS-Treated Fumed Silica?

We supply HDK H20 and equivalent PDMS-treated grades for silicone rubber compounding. Contact us for pricing, samples, and technical data sheets.

Request Samples & Pricing

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use hydrophilic fumed silica (Aerosil 200) in silicone rubber?
Yes, but only for HTV compounding with in-situ HMDS treatment. You add Aerosil 200 together with HMDS to the sigma mixer at elevated temperature, which converts the surface to hydrophobic in real time. Using Aerosil 200 without treatment will cause severe crepe hardening — the compound becomes a stiff, unprocessable brick within days or even hours at ambient temperature. For RTV systems, always use pre-treated grades.
What is the maximum fumed silica loading in silicone rubber?
Practical maximum is 50–60 phr for HTV systems and 25–35 phr for RTV. Above these levels, the compound becomes too viscous to process. Tensile strength also plateaus or decreases at very high loadings because excess silica creates too many cross-links, reducing chain mobility needed for energy dissipation. Typical optimal loading for maximum tensile strength is 35–45 phr for HTV.
Why does my RTV silicone sealant fail to cure in the center of deep sections?
This is a moisture diffusion limitation for condensation-cure RTV-1 systems. Moisture from the air must diffuse through the cured skin to reach uncured material — fumed silica does not cause this, but a high fumed silica loading can reduce moisture permeability and slow deep cure. For deep-section applications, use addition-cure RTV-2 systems (mixed before pouring) rather than moisture-cure RTV-1.
How does fumed silica affect the transparency of silicone rubber?
High-quality fumed silica at proper dispersion can produce transparent to translucent silicone rubber because the refractive index of fumed silica (1.46) is close to that of PDMS (1.40–1.43). Agglomerates scatter light and cause haze. For optical-grade transparent silicone (LED encapsulants, optical bonding), use well-dispersed R202 or R972 at moderate loadings (15–25 phr) with optimized mixing. Certify with haze measurements before production scale-up.
What is the difference between HDK H20 and Aerosil R202?
Both are PDMS-treated fumed silica grades with similar BET (100 ± 20 m²/g) and intended for silicone rubber reinforcement. HDK H20 (Wacker) and Aerosil R202 (Evonik) are functionally equivalent and interchangeable in most applications. Minor differences exist in carbon content and PDMS chain length — request data sheets and run a comparison compound to verify before switching suppliers in a validated product.
🛡️

Privacy & Cookies

We use cookies to optimize your experience and analyze traffic. By clicking "Accept", you agree to our Privacy Policy.