HDPE (High-Density Polyethylene) or PEAD is the most widely used thermoplastic in infrastructure piping worldwide. Combining mechanical strength, flexibility, chemical inertia, and total recyclability, it is the material that made possible the revolution in agricultural drainage, cable protection, and sustainable infrastructure over the last decades.
What is HDPE?


HDPE is a thermoplastic polymer produced by the polymerization of ethylene (CH₂=CH₂). Its molecular structure is predominantly linear, with few branches — which results in high density, better molecular packaging, and superior mechanical properties compared to medium and low-density polyethylenes.
It was developed in the 1950s by chemists Karl Ziegler and Giulio Natta, whose joint work earned them the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1963. Since then, it has become one of the most produced and researched plastics in the world.


HDPE is classified by its typical density between 0.941 and 0.965 g/cm³, distinguishing it from LDPE (low density, 0.910–0.940 g/cm³) and LLDPE (linear low-density polyethylene).
Technical Properties
Mechanical and Physical Properties
| Property | Typical Value | Reference Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Density | 0.941 – 0.965 g/cm³ | ISO 1183 |
| Tensile strength (yield) | 25 – 45 MPa | ISO 527 |
| Tensile strength (rupture) | 30 – 50 MPa | ISO 527 |
| Elasticity modulus (tension) | 800 – 1,200 MPa | ISO 527 |
| Charpy impact resistance (23°C) | No fracture | ISO 179 |
| Shore D hardness | 60 – 70 | ISO 868 |
| Continuous use temperature | -50°C to +60°C | — |
| Deformation temperature under load | ~80°C | ISO 75 |
| Linear expansion coefficient | 1.2 × 10⁻⁴ /°C | ISO 11359 |
| Estimated service life | 75 – 100 years | ISO 9080 |
| Melt flow index (MFI) | 0.2 – 1.5 g/10 min | ISO 1133 |
| Recyclability | 100% (SPI code: 2) | — |
Chemical Resistance
HDPE is highly resistant to a wide range of chemical agents:
| Agent | Resistance |
|---|---|
| Diluted and concentrated acids (except strong oxidants) | Excellent |
| Bases and alkalines | Excellent |
| Saltwater and seawater | Excellent |
| Oils and greases | Good |
| Aliphatic solvents | Good to moderate |
| Aromatic hydrocarbons (>60°C) | Limited |
| Strong oxidizing acids (HNO₃ conc.) | Poor |
Comparison with Other Materials
| Characteristic | HDPE | PVC | Steel | Concrete | PP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weight (DN 100 pipe, 6m) | ~3 kg | ~5 kg | ~40 kg | ~180 kg | ~3.5 kg |
| Estimated service life | 75–100 years | 50–70 years | 20–50 years* | 50–80 years | 50–75 years |
| Corrosion resistance | Immune | Immune | Low (requires protection) | Moderate | Immune |
| Flexibility | High | Low | None | None | Moderate |
| Recyclability | 100% | Complex (contains chlorine) | 100% | Limited (reuse) | 100% |
| Impact resistance (low temperature) | Excellent | Poor | Good | Poor | Good |
| Installation (ease) | Very easy | Easy | Difficult | Very difficult | Easy |
| Biological inertia | Total | Good | Low | Moderate | Total |
* Steel without cathodic protection. With adequate protection, it can reach 50+ years.
HDPE Applications in Infrastructure
| Application | Why HDPE | Techduto Product |
|---|---|---|
| Protection of underground electrical cables | Mechanical strength, long service life, NBR 15715 | Techduto NBR, Techduto DW |
| Protection of fiber optic and telecom cables | Internal smoothness, resistance to crushing | Techduto NBR |
| Subterranean agricultural drainage | Flexibility, resistance to acidic soils, roots, and fungi | Techdreno NBR, Techdreno KC |
| Photovoltaic plants | UV resistance (with additives), lightness in the field | Techduto DW UV |
| Road infrastructure | Support for traffic loads, deformation without breakage | Techdreno DW |
| Railways | Resistance to vibration and dynamic loads | Techdreno DW |
| Sanitation and landfills | Chemical inertia, resistance to leachates | Techdreno DW |
| Civil construction and subdivisions | Rapid installation, lightness, cost-benefit | Techduto NBR |
HDPE and Sustainability
Naturally Circular Material
HDPE is the thermoplastic with the best environmental balance in infrastructure. Identified by the recycling code SPI 2, it is 100% recyclable and can return to the production chain without significant loss of mechanical properties — a fact proven by studies from UEM-PR and UNISC-RS.
Measurable Environmental Benefits
| Indicator | Recycled HDPE vs virgin resin |
|---|---|
| Energy consumption in production | -33% |
| Water consumption | -90% |
| CO₂ emissions | -66% per ton |
Carbon Footprint Throughout the Life Cycle
When considering the complete life cycle — production, transportation, installation, operation, and disposal — HDPE presents advantages over concrete and steel:
- Lightness: HDPE pipes weigh up to 60 times less than equivalent concrete, drastically reducing transportation and logistics emissions
- Installation without heavy civil work: less equipment, less time, less fuel
- Durability: 75–100 years without significant maintenance eliminate the impact of recurrent replacements
- Inertia: does not release toxic substances into the soil or water throughout its service life
Post-Use Recycling
Techduto maintains an active program for the collection and recycling of post-use HDPE. In 2025, we developed recycled compounds from post-consumer HDPE, reincorporating the material into the production cycle in products with proven quality.
Applicable Technical Standards
| Standard | Scope |
|---|---|
| ABNT NBR 15715 | Corrugated HDPE pipes for cable protection — technical requirements |
| ABNT NBR 7474 | Corrugated pipes for subterranean drainage |
| ISO 9080 | Prediction of thermoplastic pipe service life |
| ISO 1183 | Density determination |
| ISO 527 | Tensile test |
| ISO 1133 | Melt flow index (MFI) |
| ISO 179 | Charpy impact resistance |
Manufacturing Process of Corrugated HDPE Pipes
The production of corrugated HDPE pipes goes through precise stages:
- Raw material selection: virgin HDPE piping grade, with melt flow index and density verified by the supplier’s certificate
- Extrusion: the HDPE granules are melted in a single or double screw extruder, forming a continuous smooth pipe at controlled temperatures between 180°C and 230°C
- Corrugation: the melted pipe passes through a corrugator — a set of interchangeable molds that form the external corrugations while maintaining a smooth internal surface
- Cooling: the pipe is cooled in a water tank or by forced air, fixing the final dimensions
- Dimensional control: automatic sensors verify the external diameter, internal diameter, and wall thickness in real-time
- Winding or cutting: the pipe is wound (rolls) or cut into bars according to specification
- Laboratory tests: samples from each batch undergo compression, impact, and dimensional control tests
- Traceability: each coil or bar receives identification with batch code, date, shift, and test results
Techduto designs and manufactures its own corrugation lines — the mastery of production equipment is part of the company’s DNA since 1986, when it built the first national corrugator.