Material property lookup

Thermal Expansion Coefficients of Common Materials

Compare how common materials expand with temperature for tolerance, fit, and thermal-stress checks.

Instant expansion lookup

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Select a material to view linear coefficient of thermal expansion.

CTE
  • Use the searchable table below for context and notes.

Selected value

Reference table

Thermal expansion coefficient table

Material Group CTE (um/m.K) CTE (10-6/deg F) Notes
Aluminum Metal 23 12.8 Common aluminum reference
Carbon Steel Metal 12 6.7 Typical steel value
Stainless Steel Metal 17 9.4 Austenitic stainless reference
Copper Metal 16.5 9.2 Typical copper value
Brass Metal 19 10.6 Varies by alloy
Titanium Metal 8.6 4.8 Lower expansion metal
Glass Ceramic 9 5.0 Soda-lime glass
Concrete Construction 10 5.6 Mix and aggregate dependent
Polycarbonate Polymer 65 36.1 Thermoplastic reference
PVC Polymer 52 28.9 Rigid PVC reference
Wood Along Grain Wood 5 2.8 Moisture often dominates dimensional change

Formulas

Thermal expansion formulas

Linear expansion

Delta L = alpha x L0 x Delta T

Thermal strain

epsilon_thermal = alpha x Delta T

Thermal expansion coefficients vary with temperature and material condition. Use the relevant temperature range for precision work.

Reference

How engineers use thermal expansion

Fits and clearances

CTE helps predict dimensional changes across operating temperature ranges.

Thermal stress

Restrained expansion can create stress in components and assemblies.

Mixed materials

Different CTE values can cause warping, loosening, or cracking.

Tolerance stackups

Thermal growth matters when precision dimensions must hold across temperatures.

FAQ

Thermal expansion questions

What is coefficient of thermal expansion?

It is the fractional change in length per unit temperature change.

What is CTE of aluminum?

A common reference value for aluminum is about 23 um/(m.K).

Why does thermal expansion matter?

It affects fits, clearances, thermal stress, and dimensional stability.

Related

Common material property tables