Polyethylene injection molding is used for HDPE and LDPE parts such as caps, containers, clips, covers, handles and chemical-resistant components. PE offers low density, good chemical resistance and toughness, but it has high shrinkage and can warp if wall thickness, gate location and cooling are not designed correctly.
PE is familiar as a commodity plastic, but molded part performance still depends on grade selection. HDPE, LDPE and LLDPE differ in stiffness, flexibility, impact behavior, shrinkage and environmental stress crack resistance.
HDPE vs LDPE for Injection Molding
The best polyethylene grade depends on stiffness, flexibility, chemical exposure and dimensional control.
| PE material | Typical behavior | Common molded parts |
|---|---|---|
| HDPE | Stiffer, tougher and more chemical resistant | Caps, containers, housings, clips and industrial parts. |
| LDPE | Softer and more flexible | Flexible covers, soft caps and squeeze-related parts. |
| LLDPE | Good toughness and flexibility | Flexible molded components and impact-resistant parts. |
| Filled PE | Improved stiffness or lower shrinkage | Special industrial parts with custom requirements. |
| UV-stabilized PE | Better outdoor durability | Outdoor covers, containers and hardware. |
Polyethylene DFM Checklist
- Plan for higher shrinkage than many amorphous plastics.
- Keep wall thickness consistent to reduce warpage.
- Use gate locations that support balanced filling and packing.
- Add ribs carefully because PE shrinkage can show sink or distortion.
- Specify chemical exposure, outdoor exposure and flexibility requirements.
PE vs PP for Molded Parts
Polyethylene and polypropylene overlap in many low-cost molded parts. PP is often stiffer and better for living hinges, while PE can be stronger in impact and chemical applications depending on grade.
| Vereiste | PE advantage | PP advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Low temperature toughness | Often good, especially HDPE | Grade-dependent. |
| Living hinge | Possible but less common | Often excellent. |
| Chemische bestendigheid | Good for many chemicals | Also good for many chemicals. |
| Dimensional control | Higher shrinkage can be challenging | Also shrinks, but grade options vary. |
| Stiff lightweight part | HDPE can work | PP often provides good stiffness-to-cost balance. |
Internal Links for PE Material Decisions
Polyethylene should be selected against PP, POM, nylon and TPE when the part needs chemical resistance, toughness, flexibility or low cost.
- Polypropylene injection molding guide
- Chemical resistance guide
- Plastic injection molding materials guide
Veelgestelde vragen
Can polyethylene be injection molded?
Yes. HDPE, LDPE and LLDPE can be injection molded into caps, clips, containers, covers and other custom plastic parts.
Does polyethylene shrink a lot in injection molding?
Yes. PE has relatively high shrinkage, so mold design, wall thickness, cooling and gate location must be planned carefully.
Is HDPE or LDPE better for molded parts?
HDPE is stiffer and more common for structural or container-like parts, while LDPE is softer and more flexible.
Is polyethylene better than polypropylene?
It depends. PE can offer good impact and chemical resistance, while PP is often chosen for stiffness, low cost and living hinge performance.


