Collection: Specialty Sealants & Caulks
Industrial and specialty sealants for commercial construction, firestop penetrations, structural glazing, high-temperature service, and food-processing equipment. These are high-performance formulations defined by joint movement capability, temperature resistance, chemical resistance, and compliance with industry standards, not the everyday caulks you would find at a hardware store. For chemistry selection, joint design, and application guidance, the sealant and caulking selection guide is the starting point.
ASTM C920 Class 25: the industrial joint-sealant benchmark
For building joints, ASTM C920 is the baseline for elastomeric joint sealants. Class 25 formulations accommodate ±25% joint movement, the minimum grade for most commercial joints. Class 50 and Class 100/50 handle larger movements common in curtain walls and large expansion joints. C920 sealants carry a Type/Grade/Class/Use designation, and the joint sealant selection guide walks through decoding a spec string into a product pick.
Chemistry comparison
| Chemistry | UV / weather | Paintable | Movement | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silicone | Excellent (20+ yr) | No (most) | ±25% to ±50% | Curtain walls, glazing, sanitary joints |
| Polyurethane | Good (10 to 20 yr) | Yes | ±25% | Traffic decks, sidewalks, masonry |
| Hybrid STPE / MS polymer | Very good | Yes | ±25% to ±35% | Low-VOC occupied buildings, multi-substrate |
| Intumescent firestop | Indoor only | Yes (most) | Per UL listing | Rated wall/floor penetrations |
| High-temp silicone | 500°F+ continuous | No | Limited | Furnace doors, flue pipe, exhaust |
By application
Commercial construction: C920 Class 25 for vertical joints, Class 50 for expansion joints, UL-listed firestop for rated wall and floor penetrations. For firestop specifically, see the firestop product selection guide. For data centers, colocation, and mission-critical facilities, start with the NFPA 75 firestop guide for data centers or the broader firestop compliance hub for mission-critical facilities.
Manufacturing and industrial: high-temperature silicone for furnaces and exhaust, chemical-resistant polymers for process piping, and NSF 51 certified sealants for food and beverage lines. See the high-temperature sealant guide and the food-processing sealants guide.
Infrastructure and paving: traffic-bearing polyurethane for parking decks and sidewalks; specialized cold-applied or hot-poured formulations for bridge decks and PCC pavement. See the bridge expansion joint guide and the highway and pavement joint sealant guide.
Already specifying a brand? Find the equivalent we carry.
If you have a competitor part number from Boss, DAP, Hilti, OSI, Sika, 3M, or another major brand, the sealant cross-reference looks up an in-stock equivalent with current pricing.
What does ASTM C920 Class 25 actually mean?
Class 25 is the movement capability rating. The sealant can accommodate a joint that expands or contracts by ±25% of its original width without failing. A Class 25 sealant in a 1/2-inch joint handles ±1/8 inch of movement. For most vertical building joints, Class 25 is the minimum; curtain wall joints and large expansion joints typically need Class 50 or higher. The joint sealant selection guide covers the full Type/Grade/Class/Use decoder.
Silicone, polyurethane, or hybrid: which sealant should I use?
Silicone for long-term weather exposure on glass, metal, and sanitary surfaces when paintability doesn't matter. Polyurethane for concrete, masonry, and horizontal traffic-bearing joints where you need to paint over the sealant. Hybrid STPE (sometimes called MS polymer) when you want silicone's weather resistance with polyurethane's paintability. The sealant and caulking selection guide has a chemistry-by-application matrix if you want to dig deeper.
Can I paint over silicone sealant?
Most pure silicones cannot be painted. Paint beads up or peels off. A few silicone-hybrid products are labeled as paintable, but read the datasheet carefully. If the joint will be painted, use a polyurethane or hybrid STPE sealant instead.
Which sealant is right for food-processing equipment?
Look for NSF/ANSI 51 certification for incidental food contact. Food-grade silicone is the most common choice because of its temperature resistance and long service life. Avoid general-purpose silicones with mildewcides or plasticizers in food areas. The food-processing sealants guide covers certification details and approved product categories.
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