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ME 318

Manufacturing Techniques

POLYMER PROCESSING
The processing of polymeric materials -plastics, elastomers and composites- is
characterized by a wide variety of distinct methods or techniques. Techniques involving
the continuous manufacture of a product basically have uniform cross section, which
include extrusion, extrusion covering, film blowing and calendering; techniques
involving the shaping of a deformable polymer perform against a mold surface, which
involve coating and rotational molding; and, finally, techniques which involve the
complete filling of a mold cavity, and include casting, compression molding, transfer
molding, injection molding and reaction injection molding.
Fundamental to the choice of polymer processing technique is the question of
whether to use a high molecular mass starting material or a system that polymerizes in
the mold.
In the liquid state, most monomers and low molecular mass polymers flow in
much the same way as molten metals in that the shear stress needed to make them flow is
directly proportional to the shear strain rate- they are Newtonian fluids. As their
molecular masses increase their viscosities increase but at some point the long thin chains
begin to rearrange themselves under the applied shear stressed to line up in the direction
of flow, and the proportionality between stress and strain rate starts to change- the
polymer has become non-Newtonian.
The consequences of the much higher pressures needed to cast high molecular
mass polymers are not difficult to appreciate. In addition, the arrangements for keeping
the mold closed will need to be more robust since the pressures applied to the mold tend
to force the two mold halves open during filling and feeding. And the molds themselves
must be made from stronger materials to withstand being repeatedly exposed to these
pressures.
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Reducing the viscosity of the polymer will clearly allow higher flow rates at the
same applied pressures, or permit the use of substantial machinery and tooling. The
polymer chains tangle around each other and form so-called mechanical cross links,
effectively strengthening the material in the solid state but making it more difficult to cast
in the fluid state. So the grade polymer, which is easy to cast, is going to give inferior
performance in the end product and the best performance will be obtained from a material
that is more difficult to cast.
Extrusion
The extrusion process basically is continuously shaping a fluid polymer through
the orifice of a suitable tool (die), and subsequently solidifying it into a product
(extrudate of constant cross section). In the case of thermoplastics, the feed material, in
powder or pellet form, is most commonly heated to a fluid state and pumped into the die,
through a screw extruder; it is then solidified by cooling after exiting from the die.

Figure 1. Extrusion dies can have complex shapes to (a) compensate for die swell,
(b) distribute material across the width of a sheet, or (c) coat a wire. [1]

Extrusion products are often subdivided into groups that include filaments of

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circular cross-section, profiles of irregular cross section, axissymmetric tubes and pipes,
and flat products such as films or sheets.
Film Blowing
The film blowing process basically consists of a extruding a tube of molten
thermoplastic and continuously inflating it to several times initial diameter, to form a thin
tubular product that can be used directly, or slit to form a flat film.

Figure 2. Film Blowing.


Films produced by the film blowing process are widely used for agricultural,
construction, and industrial applications, including covers for silage, greenhouses,
chemical/solar ponds, flat cars, etc., or for a variety of packing applications, with include
wrap, can lining, fabricated bags such as garbage bags, gusseted (V-tucks, W-folds)
fashion bags, and T-shirt bags (sacks) for groceries.

ME 318

Manufacturing Techniques

Sheet Thermoforming
Sheet thermoforming, or simply thermoforming, involves the heating of a flat
thermoplastic sheet to a softened state (above the glass transition temperature T g for noncrystallizing thermoplastics or near the melting temperature T m for crystallizing ones),
followed by the deformation (forming) of the softened sheet into a desired shape by
pneumatic or mechanical means, and finally its solidification into this shape by cooling.

Figure 3. (1) A flat plastic sheet is softened by heating; (2) the softened sheet is
placed over a concave mold cavity; (3) a vacuum draws the sheet into the cavity; and (4)
the plastic hardens on contact with the cold mold surface, and the part is removed and
subsequently trimmed from the web.

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Products made by sheet thermoforming include skin and blisterpacks, individual


containers for jelly or cream, vials, cups, tubs, trays and lids. As many as millions of parts
per day can be produced with a tool featuring several hundred cavities. Larger products
are generally made from cut sheets at much shower rates; the heating stage often is the
limiting factor. Transparent products, such as contoured windows, skylights and cockpit
canopies, are often made by this method.
Blow Molding
The basic principle of the blow molding process is to inflate a softened
thermoplastic hollow preform against the cooled surface of a closed mold, where the
material solidifies into a hollow product.

Figure 4. (1) Injection molding of parison, (2) stretching, and (3) blowing.
Packing is the major area of application of small to medium-size disposable blow
molded products. Liquid foodstuffs are increasingly packaged in narrow neck plastic PET
bottles. Blow molded containers are also used for cosmetics, toiletries, pharmaceutical
and medical packaging and a variety of household products.

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Manufacturing Techniques

Compression Molding
The compression molding process is used for temperature activated thermosetting
polymers. Compression molding basically involves the pressing of a deformable material
charge between the two halves of a heated mold, and its transformation into a solid
product under the effect of the elevated mold temperature. Compression molding
temperatures are often in the range 140-200 0C; mold pressures can vary from 35 atm to
700 atm. Material charges are often pre-heated to speed up the initial softening stage.
Compression molding is characterized by the show and moderate flow of the very
viscous material charge to fill the cavity, and it is not normally suitable for making
complicated parts, or parts featuring fragile inserts.

Figure 5. (1) Charge is loaded, (2) and (3) charge is compressed and cured, and (4)
part is ejected and removed.
Transfer Molding
Transfer molding is often associated with compression molding, because it is used
with the same two classes of materials, temperature-activated thermosets, and
vulcanizable rubbers. In transfer molding a softened temperature-activated material is
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transferred through a narrow gate into the closed cavity of a heated mold, where it cures
to a solid state.
Transfer molding is normally used with materials that have fairly high pre-curing
fluidity, facilitating the flow from the loading area to cavities. This also permits the
molding of complex parts, parts featuring fragile inserts.
Injection Molding
The injection molding process involves the rapid pressure filling of a specific
mold cavity with a fluid material, followed by the solidification of the material into a
product. The process is used for thermoplastics, thermosetting resins, and rubbers.

Figure 6. (a) Reciprocating plunger and (b) reciprocating rotating screw. [1]
The injection molding of thermoplastics can be subdivided into a several stages.
At the plasticity stage, the feed unit operates pretty much as an extruder, melting and
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homogenizing the material in the screw/barrel system. The screw however is allowed to
retract, to make room for the molten material reservoir. At the injection state, the screw is
used as a ram for the rapid transfer of the molten material from the reservoir to the cavity
between the two halves of the closed mold. Since the mold is kept at a temperature below
the solidification temperature of the material, it is essential to inject the molten material
rapidly ensure complete filling of the cavity. A high holding packing pressure is normally
exerted, to partially compensate for the thermal contraction of the material upon cooling.
After the cooling stage, the mold can be opened and the solid product removed.

Figure 7. Typical cavity pressure variations over the entire injection molding
cycle is shown here.
The cavity pressure rises rapidly during the filling stage, which is followed by the
holding or the packing stage. Once the gate freezes off, the cavity pressure decays with
time till the part is ejected. At high pressures, a polymer melt is compressible, allowing
additional material to be packed in the mold cavity after mold filling is complete. This is
necessary to reduce non-uniform part shrinkage, which leads to part warpage. Excessive
packing results in a highly stressed part and may cause ejection problems whereas

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insufficient packing causes poor surface, sink marks, welds and non-uniform shrinkage.
All thermoplastics are, in principle, suitable for injection molding, but since fast
flow rates are needed, grades with good fluidity are normally preferable. Significant
differences in ease of molding, and the resulting structure and properties of products are
found between amorphous and crystallizing thermoplastics; they concern problems such
as shrinkage, warpage, sink marks, flashing, and short shots.

Figure 8. Pressure history varies with position.


The pressure distribution inside the mold cavity changes with distance from the
inlet gate. The figure 8 shows a simple part geometry with pressure variations among the
points one, two and three respectively. Further away from the gate, pressure rises slowly
and it decays quicker than at the points closer to the gate. The pressure in the mold cavity
should be more uniform to minimize part warpage.
A major disadvantage of injection molded products is the incorporation of fine
details such as bosses, locating pins, mounting holes, ribs, flanges, etc., which normally
eliminates assembly and finishing operations.

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Figure 9. The figure shows a typical temperature history in the cavity during
the injection molding cycle.
The gate freezes off first because it is thinner than the cavity. Once the part
temperature is well below the polymer solidification temperature, the part is ejected.
PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN INJECTION MOLDING
There are many details to pay attention in injection molding which affects the
physical properties, they may even cause to the failure of the molding.
Jetting occurs when polymer melt is pushed at a high velocity through restrictive
areas, such as the nozzle, runner, or gate, into open, thicker areas, without forming
contact with the mold wall. This leads to part weakness, surface blemishes, and a
multiplicity of internal defects.
An air trap is air that is caught inside the mold cavity. It becomes trapped by
converging polymer melt fronts or because it failed to escape from the mold vents, or

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mold inserts, which also act as vents.


A short shot is a molded part that is incomplete because insufficient material was
injected into the mold. It can be caused by entrapped air, insufficient machine injection
pressure (resulting from high melt resistance and a restricted flow path), pre-mature
solidification of the polymer melt, and machine defects.
A sink mark is a local surface depression and a void is a vacuum bubble in the
core. Sink marks and voids are caused by localized shrinkage of the material at thick
sections without sufficient compensation when the part is cooling.
A weld line (also called a weld mark or a knit line) is formed when separate melt
fronts traveling in opposite directions meet. The formation of weld lines can be caused by
holes or inserts in the part, multi-gate cavity systems, or variable wall thickness where
hesitation or race tracking occurs. The weld lines are undesirable when the strength and
the surface quality are important.
REFERENCES
[1] Introduction to Manufacturing Processes, John A. Schey, 2 nd Ed., McGraw Hill,
1987.
[2] Plastics, Materials and Processing, A. Brent Strong, 2 nd Ed., Prentice Hall,
2000.

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