Silicone rubber is used in automotive applications, many cooking, baking, and food storage products,
sex toys, apparel including undergarments, sportswear, and
footwear, electronics, to home repair and hardware, and a host of unseen applications. It is usually processed and shaped with the following methods:
Extrusion Once mixed and coloured, silicone rubber can be
extruded into tubes, strips, solid cord, or custom profiles according to the size specifications of the manufacturer. Cord can be joined to make
O-rings and extruded profiles can be joined to make seals.
Injection moulding Silicone rubber can be
moulded into custom shapes and designs. Manufacturers work to set industry tolerances when extruding, cutting, or joining silicone rubber profiles. In the UK this is BS 3734, for extrusions the tightest level is E1 and the widest is E3.
3D printing Silicone rubber can be 3D printed (liquid deposition modelling LDM) using pump-nozzle extrusion systems. Unfortunately, standard silicone formulations are optimized to be used by extrusion and injection moulding machines and are not applicable in LDM-based 3D printing. The rheological behavior and the
pot life need to be adjusted. 3D printing also requires the use of a removable support material that is compatible with the silicone rubber. Liquid silicone rubber is also manufactured for
life science applications (syringe pistons, closure for dispensing system, gaskets for IV flow regulator, respiratory masks, and implantable chambers for IV administration), cosmetic products (mascara brush, make-up packaging, make-up applicator, and lipstick moulds), and optics products (circular lens,
collimators,
Fresnel lenses, and free-form lenses). Freeze-tolerant solar water-heating panels exploit the elasticity of silicone to repeatedly accommodate the expansion of water on freezing, while its extreme temperature tolerance maintains a lack of brittleness below freezing and excellent tolerance of temperatures in excess of . Its property of not having a carbon backbone, but a chemically robust silicon backbone instead, reduces its potential as a food source for dangerous waterborne bacteria such as
Legionella. Non-dyed silicone rubber tape with an
iron(III) oxide additive (making the tape a red-orange colour) is used extensively in aviation and aerospace wiring applications as a splice or wrapping tape due to its non-flammable nature. The iron oxide additive adds high thermal conductivity but does not change the high electrical insulation property of the silicone rubber. This type of
self-amalgamating tape amalgamates or fuses to itself, so that when stretched and wrapped around cables, electrical joints, hoses, and pipes it bonds into a strong seamless rubbery electrically insulating and waterproof layer, although not adhesive. As an electrical insulator, silicone rubber has the added virtue of remaining non-conductive when damaged by heat, reducing the likelihood of runaway arcing. With the addition of carbon or another conductive substance as a powdered filler, silicone rubber can be made electrically conductive while retaining most of its other mechanical properties. As such it is used for flexible contacts which close on being pressed, used in many devices such as
computer keyboards and
remote control handsets.
Electrical insulation Silicone rubber is used as an
electrical insulator in
power cables and cable joints. Silicone-insulated cables are advantageous in that they can withstand temperatures from , and are highly flexible. These properties make them suitable for maintaining circuit integrity in the event of a fire. ==Self-healing==