ESD
EVA vs ESD XLPE vs ESD EPE — Which One Is Right for Your Application?
Technical
Guide | ESD Foam Trays & Packaging Solutions
1. Introduction: Why ESD Foam
Matters
In electronics
manufacturing, ESD (Electrostatic Discharge) protection is not optional — it is
a fundamental requirement. Static-sensitive components such as ICs, connectors,
sensors, and PCB assemblies can be permanently damaged by electrostatic discharge
as low as 100V, while human touch can generate up to 25,000V.
ESD foam trays and
inserts serve as the primary contact packaging for these components during
production, inter-station transfer, storage, and shipping. Choosing the right
ESD foam material directly impacts product safety, production efficiency, and
total cost of ownership.
This guide provides a
detailed comparison of three mainstream ESD foam materials — ESD EVA, ESD XLPE,
and ESD EPE — to help engineers and procurement professionals make informed
material selections.
2. Typical Application Scenarios
2.1 Production Line Turnover Trays
Custom foam trays with
precision-machined cavities are widely used on SMT lines, assembly stations,
and test benches. Components are loaded into individual pockets for organized
storage and efficient pick-and-place during production. These trays are reused
hundreds to thousands of times and require excellent durability, dimensional
stability, and permanent ESD protection.
2.2 Shipping & Transit Packaging
ESD foam inserts are
placed inside cartons or cases to cushion and protect components during
transportation. Requirements focus on cushioning performance and
cost-effectiveness. For one-time or short-term use, non-permanent ESD
protection may be acceptable.
3. Material Overview
3.1 ESD EVA Foam (Ethylene Vinyl Acetate)
Fig.1
— Black ESD EVA foam tray with CNC-machined cavities for electronic components
Property
Specification
Color
Black (standard); Colors available (higher MOQ required)
Density
≈65 kg/m³
Hardness
Shore C ≈38
Cell Structure
Closed-cell (≥90%), partially cross-linked
ESD Resistance
10³–10⁶ Ω or 10⁵–10⁹ Ω (selectable)
ESD Permanence
Permanent (carbon black internally compounded)
Processing Methods
CNC milling; Die-cutting + glue bonding
3.2 ESD XLPE Foam (Radiation Cross-linked Polyethylene)
Fig.2
— Black ESD XLPE foam tray with precision CNC-machined cavities
Property
Specification
Color
Black
Density
≈45 kg/m³
Hardness
Shore C 30–45
Cell Structure
Closed-cell (≥95%), radiation cross-linked (not chemically
cross-linked)
ESD Resistance
10³–10⁶ Ω or 10⁵–10⁹ Ω (selectable)
ESD Permanence
Permanent (carbon black internally compounded)
Processing Methods
Die-cutting + heat bonding; CNC milling; Vibration knife cutting
Important: Our ESD XLPE
foam is manufactured exclusively through radiation cross-linking technology,
which provides superior and more uniform cross-link density compared to
chemical cross-linking. This results in finer cell structure, better mechanical
consistency, and lower outgassing — critical advantages for electronics and
cleanroom applications.
Fig.3
— Red/pink ESD EPE foam tray with die-cut cavities
Property
Specification
Color
Red / Pink
Density
≈18 lbs/m³
Hardness
Shore C 15–25
Cell Structure
Semi-closed-cell (≈60–80%), non-cross-linked
ESD Resistance
10⁹–10¹¹ Ω (static dissipative level only)
ESD Permanence
Non-permanent (≤6 months effective); surface-applied antistatic
agent degrades over time
Processing Methods
Die-cutting + heat bonding
Parameter
Unit
ESD EVA
ESD XLPE
ESD EPE
ESD Properties
Surface/Volume Resistance
Ω
10³–10⁶ or 10⁵–10⁹
10³–10⁶ or 10⁵–10⁹
10⁹–10¹¹ only
ESD Permanence
—
Permanent
Permanent
Non-permanent (≤6 months)
Static Decay (<100V)
s
<0.5s
<0.5s
<2.0s (new); degrades over time
Mechanical Performance
Tensile Strength
MPa
1.5–3.0
1.5–5.0
0.15–0.35
Tear Strength
N/cm
15–40
20–60
5–15
Compression Set
%
5–15%
3–8%
15–40%
Resilience / Recovery
—
Good
Excellent
Poor (collapses easily)
Abrasion Resistance
—
Good
Excellent
Poor (sheds particles)
Fatigue Life (repeated
compression)
—
Good (2,000–5,000 cycles)
Excellent (5,000–10,000 cycles)
Poor (500–1,000 cycles)
Processing Characteristics
Suitable Processing
—
CNC; Die-cut + glue bond
Die-cut + heat bond; CNC; Vibration knife
Die-cut + heat bond only
CNC Milling Quality
—
Excellent – smooth surface
Excellent – fine & precise
Poor – strings & sheds
Min. Cavity Tolerance
mm
±0.3
±0.2
±0.5–1.0
Small Cavity (<15mm)
—
Good – clean walls
Excellent – precise walls
Poor – rough & fragile
Durability
Service Life (turnover use)
—
1–3 years
3–5 years
3–6 months (incl. ESD loss)
Temperature Range
°C
-40 to +60
-60 to +100
-30 to +60
Moisture Resistance
—
Good (closed-cell)
Excellent (high closed-cell)
Moderate (semi-open, absorbs moisture)
Cost Factors
Relative Material Price
—
1.0x (baseline)
1.0x (same as EVA)
0.5–0.7x
Processing Cost Note
—
Die-cut requires glue bonding (adds cost)
Heat bonding OK (no glue needed)
Lowest processing cost
Total Cost of Ownership
—
Moderate
Medium-low (long life, less replacement)
High in turnover use (frequent replacement)
CNC milling produces the
highest precision cavities and is ideal for prototypes and small-to-medium
batches. However, CNC routers cannot produce sharp 90-degree internal corners —
all internal corners will have a radius (R-angle) determined by the tool diameter.
Both ESD EVA and ESD XLPE machine well on CNC; ESD EPE is not recommended for
CNC due to tearing and particle shedding.
Vibration knife
(oscillating blade) cutting is available for ESD XLPE and can achieve sharp
corners that CNC cannot. However, production efficiency is relatively low,
making it best suited for small batches or complex geometries where sharp
corners are required.
Die-cutting is the most
efficient method for medium-to-large production runs. A custom die/mold is
required (tooling fee applies). Multi-layer foam trays are assembled by bonding
individual die-cut layers together.
Critical difference: ESD XLPE and
ESD EPE can be heat-bonded (thermal welding) without adhesives. ESD EVA
requires glue bonding, which adds material cost, an extra process step, and
longer production time. This makes EVA processing cost slightly higher than
XLPE for die-cut + bonded tray construction.
Use the table below to
quickly identify the best ESD foam material for your specific application:
Application
Scenario
Recommended
Reason
Alternative
SMT line turnover tray (high
frequency)
ESD XLPE
Fatigue-resistant, precise, permanent ESD, long life,
heat-bondable
ESD EVA
IC / chip storage tray
ESD XLPE
Best dimensional stability, high cavity precision
ESD EVA
Connector / terminal turnover
tray
ESD EVA
Good value, moderate hardness (Shore C 38), easy pick-place
ESD XLPE
PCB turnover / storage
EVA or XLPE
Choose by board size & turnover frequency; same price
—
Shipping packaging (disposable)
ESD EPE
Lowest cost; ESD effective for short-term use
ESD EVA
Shipping packaging (reusable
liner)
ESD EVA
Durable, moderate cost, permanent ESD
ESD XLPE
Precision optics / sensors
ESD XLPE
Minimal particle shedding, highest cleanliness
—
Cleanroom / particle-free
environment
ESD XLPE
Lowest shedding, highest closed-cell rate (≥95%)
ESD EVA
Automotive electronics turnover
ESD XLPE
Best temp range (-60~100°C) & chemical resistance
ESD EVA
Small components (cavity
<15mm)
ESD XLPE
Highest CNC precision (±0.2mm), intact cavity walls
ESD EVA
Color-coded identification needed
ESD EVA
Colors available (black + custom colors with higher MOQ)
—
Short-term / temp storage (<6
months)
ESD EPE
Lowest cost, ESD within validity period
ESD EVA
High-volume consumable padding
ESD EPE
Lowest cost, fast production via die-cutting
—
Scores are rated on a
5-point scale (5 = best performance):
Dimension
ESD EVA
ESD XLPE
ESD EPE
ESD Performance (resistance +
permanence)
4.5
4.5
2.0
CNC Machining Precision
4.0
4.5
1.5
Die-cut + Bonding Ease
3.0
4.5
4.0
Durability / Lifespan
3.5
5.0
1.5
Cushioning Protection
4.0
3.5
4.5
Cost (higher = cheaper)
3.5
3.5
5.0
Cleanliness (low shedding)
4.0
5.0
2.0
Turnover / Storage Overall
3.8
4.4
2.9
Shipping Packaging Overall
3.8
3.5
3.8
For turnover and in-line
storage applications: ESD XLPE is the top recommendation. Its
radiation cross-linked structure delivers superior durability (3–5 years),
permanent ESD protection, the highest machining precision (±0.2mm), and the
lowest particle shedding. It also supports heat bonding for die-cut tray
assembly, keeping processing costs reasonable. ESD EVA is a strong secondary
choice, especially when color coding is needed — and both materials are priced
identically.
For shipping and
disposable packaging: ESD EPE offers the lowest material and
processing cost, making it ideal for one-time or short-term use where permanent
ESD protection is not required. However, its ESD effectiveness is limited to
approximately 6 months, and it is not suitable for precision cavities or
reusable applications.
Key takeaway: Do not choose
solely based on unit price. For reusable trays, the total cost of ownership —
including replacement frequency, ESD reliability, and dimensional accuracy —
often makes ESD XLPE or EVA more economical than EPE in the long run.
———
For custom ESD foam tray
design, material samples, or quotation inquiries, please contact our sales
team. We provide full-service support from design review to mass production.
3.3 ESD EPE Foam (Expanded Polyethylene)
4. Detailed Comparison Table
5. Processing Considerations
5.1 CNC Milling
5.2 Vibration Knife Cutting
5.3 Die-Cutting + Bonding
6. Application-Based Selection
Guide
7. Overall Scoring Summary
8. Conclusion &
Recommendations





















