cbinstitute,
Try matweb.com, I use it a lot for general materials data. You may find that some of the seal materials which were once considered exotic are now easier to get hold of. Things move relatively fast in the materials world. If you are in the prototype development phase you don't need the best material, just something which works reasonably well for demos.
I would have thought the more important issue is whether your engine gives any significant benefit over everything else currently available. Assume that you have a seal material as good as any Mazda then consider the following: Unit cost, fuel efficiency, power density, controlability. Does your engine significantly surpass any current designs in any important category(s)?
If it doesn't, then you have a personal hobby engine not a business proposition. A hobby engine is perfectly respectable, just don't delude yourself into thinking it is any more than that and have fun with it.
Of course if you do score highly over other designs then you may become rich and famous.
Good Luck whichever way it goes.
gwolf.