Thermal Expansion Calculator
Calculate linear thermal expansion for PTFE, stainless steel, aluminium, and other industrial materials
Last updated: April 2026
Thermal expansion is a critical factor in engineering design, especially when working with materials like PTFE that have significantly higher expansion rates than metals. When components are exposed to temperature changes during operation, each material expands or contracts by a different amount. Failing to account for this can lead to seal failures, mechanical binding, cracked assemblies, and premature wear.
This free thermal expansion calculator uses the standard linear expansion formula to predict how much a material will grow or shrink across a given temperature range. It covers PTFE, common stainless steels, aluminium, and other engineering materials frequently used in industrial equipment and packaging machinery.
PTFE has one of the highest coefficients of thermal expansion of any engineering material — roughly 7 to 10 times greater than stainless steel. Engineers designing assemblies that combine PTFE components with metal housings must plan for this differential expansion to prevent gaps, interference fits, or mechanical failure.
Calculate Thermal Expansion
Select the material to calculate its thermal expansion
Length of the component at the initial temperature
Starting temperature of the material
Operating or target temperature
How Is Linear Thermal Expansion Calculated?
Linear thermal expansion predicts the change in length of a material when its temperature changes. The standard formula is:
- ΔL = change in length (mm)
- α = coefficient of linear thermal expansion (/°C)
- L₀ = original length (mm)
- ΔT = change in temperature (°C) = Tfinal − Tinitial
This formula assumes uniform temperature distribution and applies to linear (one-dimensional) expansion. For volumetric expansion, the coefficient is approximately three times the linear coefficient.
Coefficient of Linear Thermal Expansion Reference Table
The table below lists the coefficients used in this calculator. Values are typical for room temperature ranges and may vary with temperature, alloy composition, and manufacturing process.
| Material | Coefficient (×10⁻⁶ /°C) | Category |
|---|---|---|
| PTFE | 130(range: 100–160) | Polymer |
| Stainless Steel 304 | 17.3 | Metal |
| Stainless Steel 316 | 16 | Metal |
| Aluminium | 23.1 | Metal |
| Carbon Steel | 12 | Metal |
| Copper | 16.5 | Metal |
| Brass | 19 | Metal |
| Glass | 8.5 | Ceramic |
| Nylon | 80 | Polymer |
| PEEK | 47 | Polymer |
Why Does PTFE Thermal Expansion Matter?
PTFE's uniquely high thermal expansion rate creates real engineering challenges in equipment that cycles through temperature ranges. On heat seal packaging machines, for example, PTFE-coated surfaces expand significantly when heated to sealing temperatures (typically 150–250°C), which can affect seal bar alignment and tape tension.
Engineers working with PTFE gaskets, seals, bearings, and linings must design for this expansion to avoid:
- Buckling and wrinkling — constrained PTFE components can buckle when heated if insufficient expansion room is provided
- Seal failure — gaps can open at interfaces between PTFE and metal housings during thermal cycling
- Mechanical interference — tight-tolerance assemblies may bind or seize as PTFE parts grow
- Fatigue cracking — repeated thermal cycling without proper allowances accelerates material fatigue
Understanding PTFE material properties is essential when designing thermally demanding applications. Filled PTFE grades (glass-filled, carbon-filled) have lower expansion rates than virgin PTFE and may be preferable where dimensional stability is critical.
Frequently Asked Questions
PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) has a linear coefficient of thermal expansion ranging from 100 to 160 x10^-6 per degree Celsius, with an average of approximately 130 x10^-6 /°C. This is one of the highest expansion rates among common engineering materials — roughly 7 to 10 times greater than stainless steel. The exact value depends on the PTFE grade, filler content, and crystallinity.
When designing assemblies that combine PTFE with metal components, calculate the expansion of each material separately using this calculator, then determine the difference. Design adequate clearances, use floating or sliding joints where possible, and consider filled PTFE grades (glass-filled or carbon-filled) which have lower expansion rates. For critical applications, always prototype and test through the full operating temperature range.
Yes. If the final temperature is lower than the initial temperature, the calculator will return a negative change in length, indicating contraction. The same linear expansion formula applies in both directions. This is useful for cryogenic applications or components that cycle between hot and cold states.
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