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Automated comparison · 0% overlap

ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) vs PA6-GF15: 0% composition overlap. Significantly different materials serving different application areas.

ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) vs PA6-GF15

Side-by-side chemical composition and mechanical property comparison.

Overview

ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate)

PolymersEngineering

UV-resistant alternative to ABS — acrylic rubber replaces butadiene for excellent weatherability. Retains color and gloss outdoors for years without coating. Similar mechanical properties to ABS but with 10× better UV resistance. Trade names: Luran S (BASF/INEOS), Geloy (SABIC). Used for automotive exterior trim, outdoor electrical housings, garden furniture, and building cladding.

PA6-GF15

PolymersEngineering

Polyamide 6 with 15% short glass fiber reinforcement — moderate stiffness increase (E-Mod ~5.5 GPa vs 2.7 unfilled) while retaining good impact strength and elongation. Better toughness than higher-filled grades (GF30, GF50). Trade names: Ultramid B3EG3 (BASF), Zytel 73G15 (DuPont). Used for structural clips, housings, brackets, and under-hood automotive parts where moderate stiffness with good impact is needed.

ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate)PA6-GF15
Material Number
CategoryPolymersPolymers
StandardISO 6402ISO 527-1

Mechanical properties

PropertyASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate)PA6-GF15Unit
tensile_strength40–55100–115MPa
elongation15–354–6%
e_modulus2200–26005000–6000MPa

Compatibility Assessment

ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) and PA6-GF15 have significantly different compositions (0% overlap). These materials are not interchangeable and serve different application areas.

Automated assessment based on composition analysis

Frequently Asked Questions

Is ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) the same as PA6-GF15?

ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) and PA6-GF15 have a 0% composition overlap. They are generally not directly interchangeable.

Can I replace ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) with PA6-GF15?

Generally not recommended. The compositions differ significantly (0% overlap). These materials have different alloying concepts and are intended for different applications.

What is the difference between ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) and PA6-GF15?

The main differences are in the following elements: overall alloying content. ASA (Acrylonitrile-Styrene-Acrylate) is a Polymers grade, while PA6-GF15 is a Polymers grade.

Data provided for reference only. Always verify against the applicable specification for critical applications.

All data is for reference only. Equivalents indicate similarity, not identity. Always verify against the applicable specification for safety-critical applications. materialref.com accepts no liability for decisions based on this data.