Stratasys, Shin-Etsu Launch Silicone 25A for Industrial-Grade Additive Manufacturing Applications

New models designed to meet needs in automotive, healthcare, consumer goods and industrial sectors.

Suction cups from the new P3™ Silicone 25A.
Suction cups from the new P3™ Silicone 25A.
Stratasys

MINNETONKA, Minn. & REHOVOT, Israel - Stratasys Ltd. has announced the commercial launch of P3 Silicone 25A, a high-performance material developed through a strategic collaboration with Shin-Etsu, a global leader in silicone science. Designed exclusively for the Stratasys Origin DLP platform, this general-purpose silicone enables production of flexible parts that match the performance of traditionally molded silicone.

P3 Silicone 25A delivers the chemical resistance, thermal stability, and mechanical behavior of conventional silicones, while enabling manufacturers to eliminate tooling, reduce lead times, and support localized, low-volume production. The material has been validated in thermal aging tests up to 1,000 hours at 150°C and passed biocompatibility and flame retardancy certification.

As manufacturers seek to customize products, streamline inventory, and accelerate time to market, silicone has become essential for applications such as seals, gaskets, vibration dampers, wearables, and soft-touch components. Until now, few 3D printing materials have matched the performance of traditionally molded silicones. P3 Silicone 25A brings together Stratasys’ production-grade P3 DLP technology and Shin-Etsu’s expertise in silicone chemistry to deliver a robust solution for end-use silicone parts.

Rich Garrity, Chief Business Unit Officer at Stratasys, said, “The proliferation of additive manufacturing in production environments depends on specialty materials that perform to the standards of traditional methods. Our collaboration with Shin-Etsu delivers precisely that. P3 Silicone 25A gives manufacturers the flexibility of additive with the trusted performance of true silicone—backed by repeatable results and real-world data.”

The launch marks the first in a planned portfolio of silicone materials co-developed by Stratasys and Shin-Etsu, with additional hardness levels and application-specific variants expected in the future.

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