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How to choose the right foam material for your application: a practical guide for engineers and buyers

A practical guide to performance, protection and making better decisions earlier in the design process

Choosing the wrong foam material can lead to damaged components, premature failure, unnecessary cost and production delays.

In sectors such as aerospace, defence, electronics and industrial manufacturing, material selection has become increasingly important as supply chains, lead times and project requirements are more complex.

This guide shares some of the practical considerations engineers and buyers can use to make more informed material decisions earlier in the process.

As Nick our MD puts it:

“Most problems we’re asked to solve later in a project don’t come from poor manufacturing,” says Nick Kewell. “They usually come from material decisions made too late in the process. When the right material is selected early, everything else becomes much easier.”

What determines the “right” foam material?

There isn’t a single best material. The right choice depends on how the component will be used, the environment it will operate in and the performance required over time.

What is the foam protecting?

Start with the application itself.

Different loads, environments and handling requirements demand different material behaviour.

For example, a foam insert designed to protect sensitive electronic equipment during transport will require very different properties to a structural foam component used within an aerospace or defence environment.

In defence applications, foam inserts may need to protect sensitive or mission-critical equipment during transportation and storage while maintaining consistent performance under demanding conditions.

Different loads and risks require different material behaviour. For example:

● Fragile electronics may need soft, energy-absorbing foam inserts

● Heavy equipment may require high-density polyethylene or structural foam blocks

● Moving components may require vibration dampening materials

● Static storage may prioritise shape retention and stability

Understanding what the foam is protecting, and how it will be handled, is the foundation of good material selection. This is particularly important in sectors such as defence, aerospace and advanced manufacturing, where components must perform consistently under demanding conditions.

What environment will the material operate in?

Environmental conditions often determine whether a material succeeds or fails.

Common factors to consider include:

● Temperature extremes

● Moisture or humidity

● Chemical exposure

● UV or weathering

● Cleanroom or sterile environments For example, high temperature foams or fire-retardant foam sheets may be required in aerospace or industrial settings, while closed cell polyethylene foam or EPDM materials may be better suited to outdoor or moisture-prone environments.

Specialist materials such as ZOTEK® F OSU are often selected for aircraft interior applications because of their lightweight structure and fire performance characteristics.

Even small environmental differences can change how a material behaves over time.

What performance is required?

Performance requirements should always be defined before selecting a material.

Typical performance considerations include:

● Shock absorption

● Vibration dampening

● Acoustic control

● Thermal insulation ● Electrical or static protection

For example:

● Protective foam for military equipment may prioritise impact resistance

● Acoustic foam sheets may focus on sound absorption

● Conductive foam or anti-static materials may be required for sensitive electronics

Defining performance clearly helps avoid unnecessary redesign later.

Which material characteristics matter most?

Once the application and environment are understood, the next step is to consider the physical properties of the material.

These characteristics directly influence how a foam component performs.

Density

Density affects strength, protection and durability.

Higher density materials generally provide:

● Greater load-bearing capacity

● Improved durability

● Better resistance to repeated use

Lower density materials typically offer:

● Lighter weight

● Greater flexibility

● Improved cushioning for delicate items

Selecting the right density helps balance protection and cost.

Compression set

Compression set measures how well a material returns to its original shape after being compressed.

Materials with poor compression recovery may:

● Lose protective performance

● Require more frequent replacement

● Cause fit or sealing problems

This is particularly important for foam gaskets, seals and cushioning components used repeatedly over time.

Durability and recovery

Durability determines how well a material withstands long-term use.

Recovery refers to how quickly the material returns to its original form after impact or pressure.

Together, these factors influence:

● Product lifespan

● Maintenance requirements

● Replacement costs

In demanding environments, durability is often more important than initial price.

Common mistakes when choosing foam materials

Many material issues can be traced back to a few common decision-making mistakes.

1. Choosing based on price alone

Lower-cost materials may appear attractive at first, but can lead to higher long-term costs through:

● Reduced lifespan

● Increased maintenance

● Product failure

● Production delays

The lowest price rarely represents the lowest total cost.

2. Over-specifying the material

Selecting a material with performance levels far beyond what is required can increase cost without improving results.

Examples include:

● Using unnecessarily high-density foam

● Specifying advanced materials where simpler options would perform equally well

Careful evaluation helps balance performance and cost.

3. Under-specifying the material

Under-specification can create the opposite problem, insufficient protection or reliability.

This often leads to:

● Product damage

● Safety risks

● Rework or redesign

● Delayed production

Both over and under-specification usually stem from incomplete information early in the process.

4. Not testing materials in real conditions

Laboratory data is useful, but real-world testing often reveals issues that specifications alone cannot predict.

“A material can look perfect on paper, but behave very differently in a real production or operating environment,” says Nick Kewell. “That’s why testing, prototyping and early conversations are so important. Small issues caught early are much easier to solve than problems discovered after production starts.”

Testing prototypes under realistic conditions helps identify:

● Unexpected wear

● Fit or tolerance problems

● Environmental effects

● Handling risks

This step can prevent costly failures later.

Why early engineering input makes a difference

Material selection works best when engineers, designers and suppliers collaborate early in the design process.

Early input allows time to:

● Evaluate multiple material options

● Develop prototypes

● Test performance under realistic conditions

● Optimise design and manufacturing methods

This approach reduces risk and improves efficiency across the project lifecycle.

It also helps simplify supply chains. Increasingly, organisations are working with fewer suppliers who can support both design and production, reducing coordination and improving reliability.

Better decisions early mean fewer problems later

Choosing the right foam material isn’t about selecting the most advanced product or the lowest price. It’s about matching the material to the application, environment and performance requirements.

When these decisions are made early, and based on practical understanding, projects run more smoothly, products perform more reliably and unexpected costs are reduced.

That’s why material selection is no longer just a technical task. It’s a strategic decision.

If you’re reviewing a design, planning a new product or reassessing material performance, it can be helpful to discuss options early.

Early technical input can often prevent costly redesigns, material issues or production delays later in the project lifecycle.

For organisations working in demanding or safety-critical environments, those conversations can make a significant difference to long-term performance and reliability.

If you’re unsure which foam material is best suited to your application, Kewell Converters can provide practical guidance during the early design and specification stage. You can also explore our industry glossary to learn more about common foam materials, processes and technical terms.

About the author

Nick Kewell is Managing Director of Kewell Converters, a family-owned British foam conversion specialist based in Kent. With more than 50 years of engineering experience behind the business, Kewell Converters supports customers across defence, aerospace, medical and industrial sectors with precision-engineered foam components and practical design