| Parameter | Value | Test Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Thickness | 10 mm | — |
| Shock Absorption | 34.7% | EN 14808 |
| Vertical Deformation | 7.4 mm | EN 14809 |
| Seepage Rate | 72,000 mm/h | EN 12616 |
| Lateral Pulling Force | 1.41 MPa | EN 12230 |
| Vertical Pulling Force | 4.55 MPa | EN 12230 |
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Material | Low-density polyethylene (LDPE) |
| Cell Structure | Closed-cell |
| Water Absorption | Non-absorbent; impermeable |
| Waterproofing | Waterproof and moisture-proof |
| Weight | Lightweight and flexible |
| Environmental Profile | Eco-friendly; non-toxic; odorless; formaldehyde-free |
| Recyclability | Recyclable |
| Weather Resistance | Weather and corrosion resistant |
| Insulation | Sound and heat insulation |
Q1: How does the 72,000mm/h seepage rate per EN 12616 prevent water accumulation on synthetic turf sports fields?
The EN 12616 seepage rate measures the rate at which water passes vertically through the combined synthetic turf and underlay assembly under a standard head of water, expressed in mm/h. At 72,000mm/h, the LDPE shock pad passes water through at a rate approximately equivalent to 72 meters of rainfall per hour — several orders of magnitude above the highest recorded precipitation intensity in any climate zone globally, and well above the minimum drainage thresholds specified in FIFA, World Rugby, and equivalent national synthetic turf standards. This means the LDPE shock pad will not become a drainage bottleneck in any standard turf system design, regardless of the installed turf's drainage characteristics: water that passes through the turf pile and backing reaches and passes through the shock pad immediately, preventing accumulation at the turf-underlay interface that would create subsurface waterlogging and surface ponding under sustained rainfall. The seepage rate value is consistent across both performance data sets, confirming that this drainage performance is a structural property of the closed-cell LDPE material rather than a grade-dependent variable.
Q2: How does the closed-cell structure prevent water absorption and preserve the underlay's mechanical properties over the turf system's service life?
Open-cell foam materials — including polyurethane shock pads commonly used in synthetic turf systems — have a cellular structure in which the cell walls contain openings that allow water and other fluids to enter and be retained within the material matrix. Over time, trapped water degrades the cell walls through hydrolysis, freeze-thaw cycling, and biological activity, progressively reducing the foam's elastic recovery and shock absorption capacity. The closed-cell LDPE structure contains cells whose walls are fully sealed, forming discrete gas-filled chambers that physically prevent water from entering the material under any pressure or immersion condition. The material therefore cannot absorb water, does not retain moisture, and does not experience the progressive performance degradation associated with water infiltration — meaning the shock absorption and pulling force values measured in the EN tests are maintained throughout the installation's service life under field conditions rather than declining over time. This is the structural basis for the waterproof, moisture-proof, and non-absorbent designations confirmed in the product profile.
Q3: How should procurement teams interpret the two EN-tested performance data sets when specifying this shock pad for a football or rugby field?
Two complete performance data sets are provided, each measured under the same EN test standards (EN 14808, EN 14809, EN 12616, EN 12230) but producing different numerical results — most notably in shock absorption (34.7% vs. 27.6%) and pulling forces (lateral 1.41 vs. 0.33 MPa; vertical 4.55 vs. 2.22 MPa). Buyers should not average these values or treat them as a range for specification purposes; instead, they should confirm with the supplier which specific product grade, density, or production variant corresponds to each data set, and then select the appropriate grade based on their project's applicable performance standard. For FIFA Quality Programme certification, the combined turf+underlay system must achieve shock absorption within the standard's specified range when tested as an assembly; the shock pad grade selected will directly affect the system's total shock absorption result. The seepage rate of 72,000mm/h is identical in both sets, confirming that drainage performance is not affected by the grade distinction. Buyers should request the supplier's grade specification sheet — [Insert Product Grade Specification if Available] — to match each data set to its corresponding product formulation before finalising procurement.
Q4: What documentation is required to confirm the non-toxic, eco-friendly, and formaldehyde-free material profile for sports facility and school installation procurement?
The LDPE shock pad is confirmed as eco-friendly, non-toxic, odorless, and formaldehyde-free — material characteristics that are relevant for procurement programs subject to occupant health, indoor air quality, or environmental sustainability requirements. For indoor sports facility and school gymnasium installations in particular, local building regulations or institutional procurement policies may require formal material safety documentation confirming the absence of toxic compounds, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), or regulated substances. Buyers should request a Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS/SDS) and, where required, a third-party VOC emission test report or formaldehyde-specific test certificate from the supplier — [Insert Chemical Safety Certification if Available] — to satisfy their institution's or local authority's material compliance requirements. For school or public facility projects subject to green building certification (e.g., LEED, BREEAM, or Chinese Green Building Standard), the LDPE shock pad's recyclability and non-toxic profile may contribute to materials credits, but formal documentation of material composition, recycled content, and recyclability must be obtained from the supplier for submission to the certifying body.