Laboratory for analysis and expertise

Naval: polymorphism analysis for onboard polymer failure

Understanding the Failure of Onboard Polymers in the Naval Environment

In the naval sector, onboard polymers are exposed to severe stresses: temperature fluctuations, humidity, salt, UV, mechanical loads, chemical agents, and in-service aging. When a polymer part, seal, coating, composite, or insulation element shows cracking, loss of integrity, yellowing, deformation, or premature failure, it is essential to quickly identify the root cause. Polymorphism analysis and, more broadly, polymer analysis make it possible to characterize the nature of the material, its thermal behavior, crystallinity, transitions, and the presence of additives, mineral fillers, or residues, in order to explain a performance gap, a quality defect, or a material non-conformity. This approach naturally fits needs for expertise, material comparison, supplier control, reverse engineering, or Failure Audit.

Customer issues handled on polymer parts and assemblies

Requests often concern seals that harden or yellow, coatings that peel off, sheaths or insulators that crack, injection-molded parts that break, composites that lose their properties, or polymers whose chemical or thermal resistance becomes insufficient in service. The challenge may also be to compare two batches, qualify a new supplier, verify a material substitution, or secure dual sourcing. In these cases, polymer analysis makes it possible to objectify differences between materials beyond technical data sheets alone.

Actionable results for industrial decision-making

A well-scoped study makes it possible to obtain directly actionable results: identification of the polymer or copolymer, highlighting of structural differences, estimation of crystallinity, determination of thermal transitions, comparison of chain fragments, qualitative detection of monomers, oligomers, residual solvents, plasticizers, flame retardants, release agents, or antioxidants, as well as characterization of the mineral fillers present. For naval manufacturers, these data are used to confirm a degradation hypothesis, understand a non-conformity, support a corrective action, or secure a material choice.

A tailored approach, from screening to in-depth expertise

Support is built around your industrial needs, your level of urgency, and the depth of information required. A first approach may focus on identifying the material and fillers; a more advanced investigation may include the search for organic additives, the study of macromolecular structure, inter-batch comparison, or understanding an aging mechanism. This tiered analysis logic makes it possible to adapt the budget to the real objective without over-sizing the tests.

Laboratory Expertise and Analytical Capabilities for the Naval Sector

The laboratory supports naval manufacturers in failure investigation and advanced characterization of polymer materials. The analytical approach is built according to the objective: identification of the polymer, confirmation of a copolymer, qualitative search for organic additives, determination of filler content, structural study, comparison between two materials, or understanding of aging. The tests may involve IR microscopy, FTIR-ATR, DSC, TGA, pyrolysis GC-MS, GPC/SEC, NMR, SEM-EDX, halogen determination, Karl Fischer water content, or rheological analysis. To explore material-related issues further, you can also consult our Business Sector page and our expertise in Polymer Analysis by TGA in the Laboratory.

Techniques used depending on the type of failure

Depending on the issue, investigations combine several complementary tools: FTIR for chemical identification, DSC for glass transition temperature, melting and crystallinity, TGA for thermal behavior and residue content, Py-GC/MS for structural identification and qualitative screening of semi-volatile additives, SEM-EDX for mineral fillers and morphology, GPC/SEC for molecular weight, NMR for structure and degree of polymerization, as well as targeted measurements of antioxidants, halogens, or water. This testing logic makes it possible to link analytical results to the observed failure mechanisms.

Why choose an expert laboratory for the naval sector

Using an expert laboratory provides a cross-reading of the results and an interpretation focused on real-world use. In the naval sector, the challenge is not only to produce analytical data, but to connect that data to actual service constraints: immersion, salt spray, temperature, fatigue, vibration, maintenance, and service life. Experience in polymer characterization, failure investigation, and formulation comparison makes it possible to propose an analysis plan tailored to the need, from initial identification to in-depth expertise.

Technical support and solution-oriented guidance

The laboratory stands out for its ability to combine several characterization techniques, interpret results in a demanding industrial context, and deliver conclusions that are useful to quality, R&D, purchasing, or methods teams. Manufacturers can also strengthen their internal skills through Polymer Characterization Training. The objective remains constant: secure material choices, reduce the risk of recurrence, and speed up the resolution of failures on onboard polymers.

Start the analysis and obtain a tailored test plan

To get started, it is important to specify the part’s function, its service environment, the observed failure mode, the defect history, the reference materials available, and the expected objective: compare, identify, understand, qualify, or challenge. Based on these elements, a targeted test plan can be defined in order to mobilize the most relevant techniques and prioritize high-value analysis.

Frequently asked questions

How can the origin of a failure be identified in onboard polymers in the naval sector?

Identifying the origin of a failure relies on a cross-checked analytical strategy. It consists of comparing the state of the failed material with a compliant or reference material, determining its chemical nature, thermal and morphological characteristics, and then looking for differences in formulation, structure, or aging. This approach makes it possible to highlight a poor material choice, a supplier variation, thermo-oxidative degradation, a change in crystallinity, an abnormal filler content, or the presence of additives unsuitable for naval service.

What polymer failures can be investigated on naval equipment?

The failures investigated include breakage, loss of flexibility, deformation, accelerated aging, formulation deviations, material incompatibilities, adhesion defects, thermal resistance defects, and composition variations between batches or suppliers. The goal is to establish analytical evidence useful for industrial decision-making, quality expertise, or the resolution of a technical dispute.

What results can be expected from a polymorphism analysis applied to an onboard polymer?

The expected results are a clear understanding of the nature of the material, any possible formulation or structural deviations, and their link to the observed failure. They make it possible to decide whether to keep, correct, requalify, replace, or challenge a material, a batch, or a supplier.

Why call on Filab to analyze onboard polymers in the naval sector?

Working with Filab gives you access to multi-technique analytical expertise, a root-cause-oriented approach, and support tailored to the reliability challenges of the naval sector. The results are structured to support technical, quality, and supplier decision-making.

How do you launch a study on an onboard polymer failure?

Describe the failure, submit the samples, compare with a healthy reference, define the study objective, prioritize the analysis, interpret the results, secure the industrial decision, request technical support.
The filab advantages
A highly qualified team
A highly qualified team
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
(Staves available on www.cofrac.com - Accreditation number: 1-1793)
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
Tailor-made support
Tailor-made support
Video debriefing available with the expert
Video debriefing available with the expert
Anaïs DECAUX Customer Support Manager
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