Shaping Processes For Plastics - Chapter 13
Shaping Processes For Plastics - Chapter 13
Shaping Processes For Plastics - Chapter 13
1
SHAPING PROCESSES FOR PLASTICS
1. Properties of Polymer Melts
2. Extrusion
3. Production of Sheet, Film, and Filaments
4. Coating Processes
5. Injection Molding
6. Other Molding Processes
7. Thermoforming
8. Casting
9. Polymer Foam Processing and Forming
10. Product Design Considerations
2
Plastic Products
Plastics can be shaped into a wide variety of products:
Molded parts
Extruded sections
Films
Sheets
Insulation coatings on electrical wires
Fibers for textiles
3
More Plastic Products
In addition, plastics are often the principal ingredient
in other materials, such as
Paints and varnishes
Adhesives
Various polymer matrix composites
Many plastic shaping processes can be adapted to
produce items made of rubbers and polymer matrix
composites
4
Trends in Polymer Processing
Applications of plastics have increased at a
much faster rate than either metals or
ceramics during the last 50 years
Many parts previously made of metals are now
being made of plastics
Plastic containers have been largely
substituted for glass bottles and jars
Total volume of polymers (plastics and
rubbers) now exceeds that of metals
5
Plastic Shaping Processes are
Important
Almost unlimited variety of part geometries
Plastic molding is a net shape process
Further shaping is not needed
Less energy is required than for metals due to much
lower processing temperatures
Handling of product is simplified during production
because of lower temperatures
Painting or plating is usually not required
6
Two Types of Plastics
1. Thermoplastics
Chemical structure remains unchanged during
heating and shaping
More important commercially, comprising more than
70% of total plastics tonnage
2. Thermosets
Undergo a curing process during heating and shaping,
causing a permanent change (cross-linking) in
molecular structure
Once cured, they cannot be remelted
7
Classification of Shaping Processes
8
Polymer Melts
To shape a thermoplastic polymer it must be heated so
that it softens to the consistency of a liquid
In this form, it is called a polymer melt
Important properties of polymer melts:
Viscosity
Viscoelasticity
9
Viscosity of Polymer Melts
Fluid property that relates shear stress to shear rate
during flow
Due to its high molecular weight, a polymer melt is a
thick fluid with high viscosity
Most polymer shaping processes involve flow through
small channels or die openings
Flow rates are often large, leading to high shear rates
and shear stresses, so significant pressures are required
to accomplish the processes
10
Viscosity and Shear Rate
Viscosity of a polymer melt
decreases with shear rate,
thus the fluid becomes
thinner at higher shear rates
11
Viscosity and Temperature
Viscosity decreases with temperature, thus the
fluid becomes thinner at higher temperatures
12
Viscoelasticity
Combination of viscosity and elasticity
Possessed by both polymer solids and polymer melts
Example: die swell in extrusion, in which the hot
plastic expands when exiting the die opening
13
Die Swell
15
Extruder
Figure 13.4 Components and features of a (single-screw) extruder for
plastics and elastomers
16
Two Main Components of an
Extruder
1. Barrel
2. Screw
Die - not an extruder component
Special tool that must be fabricated for particular
profile to be produced
17
Extruder Barrel
Internal diameter typically ranges from 25
to 150 mm (1.0 to 6.0 in.)
L/D ratios usually between 10 and 30:
higher ratios for thermoplastics, lower
ratios for elastomers
Feedstock fed by gravity onto screw whose
rotation moves material through barrel
Electric heaters melt feedstock;
subsequent mixing and mechanical
working adds heat which maintains the
melt
18
Extruder Screw
Divided into sections to serve several
functions:
Feed section - feedstock is moved from
hopper and preheated
Compression section - polymer is transformed
into fluid, air mixed with pellets is extracted
from melt, and material is compressed
Metering section - melt is homogenized and
sufficient pressure developed to pump it
through die opening
19
Extruder Screw
22
Die Configurations and
Extruded Products
The shape of the die orifice determines the
cross-sectional shape of the extrudate
Common die profiles and corresponding extruded
shapes:
Solid profiles
Hollow profiles, such as tubes
Wire and cable coating
Sheet and film
Filaments
23
Extrusion of Solid Profiles
Regular shapes such as
Rounds
Squares
Irregular cross sections such as
Structural shapes
Door and window moldings
Automobile trim
House siding
24
Extrusion Die for Solid Cross
Section
Figure 13.8 (a) Side view cross-section of an extrusion die for solid regular
shapes, such as round stock; (b) front view of die, with profile of
extrudate. Die swell is evident in both views.
25
Hollow Profiles
Examples: tubes, pipes, hoses, and other cross-sections
containing holes
Hollow profiles require mandrel to form the shape
Mandrel held in place using a spider
Polymer melt flows around legs supporting the mandrel
to reunite into a monolithic tube wall
Mandrel often includes an air channel through which
air is blown to maintain hollow form of extrudate
during hardening
26
Extrusion Die for Hollow Shapes
Figure 13.10 Side view cross-section of extrusion die for shaping
hollow cross-sections such as tubes and pipes; Section A-A is a
front view cross-section showing how the mandrel is held in place;
Section B-B shows the tubular cross-section just prior to exiting the
die; die swell causes an enlargement of the diameter.
27
Wire and Cable Coating
Polymer melt is applied to bare wire as it is
pulled at high speed through a die
A slight vacuum is drawn between wire and
polymer to promote adhesion of coating
Wire provides rigidity during cooling - usually
aided by passing coated wire through a water
trough
Product is wound onto large spools at speeds
up to 50 m/s (10,000 ft/min)
28
Extrusion Die for Coating Wire
30
Materials for Polymer Sheet
and Film
All thermoplastic polymers
Polyethylene, mostly low density PE
Polypropylene
Polyvinylchloride
Cellophane
31
Sheet and Film Production
Processes
Most widely used processes are continuous, high
production operations
Processes include:
Slit-Die Extrusion of Sheet and Film
Blown-Film Extrusion Process
Calendering
32
Slit-Die Extrusion of Sheet and
Film
Production of sheet and film by conventional extrusion,
using a narrow slit as the die opening
Slit may be up to 3 m (10 ft) wide and as narrow as
around 0.4 mm (0.015 in)
A problem is uniformity of thickness throughout
width of stock, due to drastic shape change of polymer
melt as it flows through die
Edges of film usually must be trimmed because of
thickening at edges
33
Slit Die Extrusion
34
Blown-Film Extrusion Process
Combines extrusion and blowing to produce a tube of
thin film
Process sequence:
Extrusion of tube
Tube is drawn upward while still molten and
simultaneously expanded by air inflated into it through
die
Air is blown into tube to maintain uniform film
thickness and tube diameter
35
Blown-film Process
36
Calendering
Feedstock is passed through a series of rolls to reduce
thickness to desired gage
Expensive equipment, high production rates
Process is noted for good surface finish and high gage
accuracy
Typical materials: rubber or rubbery thermoplastics
such as plasticized PVC
Products: PVC floor covering, shower curtains, vinyl
table cloths, pool liners, and inflatable boats and toys
37
Calendering
38
Fiber and Filament Products
Definitions:
Fiber - a long, thin strand whose length is at
least 100 times its cross-section
Filament - a fiber of continuous length
Applications:
Fibers and filaments for textiles
Most important application
39
Materials for Fibers and
Filaments
Fibers can be natural or synthetic
Natural fibers constitute ~ 25% of total market
Cotton is by far the most important staple
Wool production is significantly less than cotton
Synthetic fibers constitute ~ 75% of total fiber market
Polyester is the most important
Others: nylon, acrylics, and rayon
40
Fiber and Filament Production -
Spinning
For synthetic fibers, spinning = extrusion of
polymer melt or solution through a
spinneret, then drawing and winding onto a
bobbin
Spinneret = die with multiple small holes
The term is a holdover from methods used
to draw and twist natural fibers into yarn or
thread
Three variations, depending on polymer :
1. Melt spinning
2. Dry spinning
3. Wet spinning
41
Melt Spinning
Starting polymer is heated to molten state
and pumped through spinneret
Typical spinneret is 6 mm (0.25 in) thick
and contains approximately 50 holes of
diameter 0.25 mm (0.010 in)
Filaments are drawn and air cooled before
being spooled onto bobbin
Significant extension and thinning of
filaments occur while polymer is still
molten, so final diameter wound onto
bobbin may be only 1/10 of extruded size
Used for polyester and nylon filaments
42
Melt Spinning
43
Dry Spinning
Similar to melt spinning, but starting polymer is in
solution and solvent can be separated by evaporation
First step is extrusion through spinneret
Extrudate is pulled through a heated chamber which
removes the solvent, leaving the polymer
Used for filaments of cellulose acetate and acrylics
44
Wet Spinning
Similar to melt spinning, but polymer is again in
solution, only solvent is non-volatile
To separate polymer, extrudate is passed through a
liquid chemical that coagulates or precipitates the
polymer into coherent strands which are then
collected onto bobbins
Used to produce filaments of rayon (regenerated
cellulose)
45
Subsequent Processing of
Filaments
Filaments produced by any of the three processes are
usually subjected to further cold drawing to align
crystal structure along direction of filament axis
Extensions of 2 to 8 are typical
Effect is to significantly increase tensile strength
Drawing is done by pulling filament between two
spools, where winding spool is driven at a faster speed
than unwinding spool
46
Injection Molding
Polymer is heated to a highly plastic state and
forced to flow under high pressure into a
mold cavity where it solidifies and the
molding is then removed from cavity
Produces discrete components almost
always to net shape
Typical cycle time 10 to 30 sec, but cycles
of one minute or more are not uncommon
Mold may contain multiple cavities, so
multiple moldings are produced each cycle
47
Injection Molded Parts
Complex and intricate shapes are possible
Shape limitations:
Capability to fabricate a mold whose cavity is the same
geometry as part
Shape must allow for part removal from mold
Part size from 50 g (2 oz) up to 25 kg (more than
50 lb), e.g., automobile bumpers
Injection molding is economical only for large
production quantities due to high cost of mold
48
Polymers for Injection Molding
Injection molding is the most widely used
molding process for thermoplastics
Some thermosets and elastomers are
injection molded
Modifications in equipment and operating
parameters must be made to avoid
premature cross-linking of these materials
before injection
49
Injection Molding Machine
Two principal components:
1. Injection unit
Melts and delivers polymer melt
Operates much like an extruder
2. Clamping unit
Opens and closes mold each injection cycle
50
Injection Molding Machine
Figure 13.20 A large (3000 ton capacity) injection
molding machine (Photo courtesy of Cincinnati
Milacron).
51
Injection Molding Machine
Figure 13.21 Diagram of an injection molding machine,
reciprocating screw type (some mechanical details are
simplified).
52
Injection Unit of Molding Machine
Consists of barrel fed from one end by a
hopper containing supply of plastic pellets
Inside the barrel is a screw which:
1. Rotates for mixing and heating polymer
2. Acts as a ram (i.e., plunger) to inject
molten plastic into mold
Non-return valve near tip of screw
prevents melt flowing backward along
screw threads
Later in molding cycle ram retracts to
its former position
53
Clamping Unit of Molding
Machine
Functions:
1. Holds two halves of mold in proper alignment with
each other
2. Keeps mold closed during injection by applying a
clamping force sufficient to resist injection force
3. Opens and closes mold at the appropriate times in
molding cycle
54
Injection Molding Cycle
55
Injection Molding Cycle
Figure 13.22 Typical molding cycle: (2) melt is injected into cavity.
56
Injection Molding Cycle
57
Injection Molding Cycle
Figure 13.22 Typical molding cycle: (4) mold opens and part
is ejected.
58
The Mold
The special tool in injection molding
Custom-designed and fabricated for the part to be
produced
When production run is finished, the mold is replaced
with a new mold for the next part
Various types of mold for injection molding:
Two-plate mold
Three-plate mold
Hot-runner mold
59
Two-Plate Mold
61
Two-Plate Mold Features
Cavity – geometry of part but slightly oversized to
allow for shrinkage
Created by machining of mating surfaces of two mold
halves
Distribution channel through which polymer melt
flows from nozzle into mold cavity
Sprue - leads from nozzle into mold
Runners - lead from sprue to cavity (or cavities)
Gates - constrict flow of plastic into cavity
62
More Two-Plate Mold Features
Ejection system – to eject molded part from cavity at
end of molding cycle
Ejector pins built into moving half of mold usually
accomplish this function
Cooling system - consists of external pump connected
to passageways in mold, through which water is
circulated to remove heat from the hot plastic
Air vents – to permit evacuation of air from cavity as
polymer melt rushes in
63
Three-Plate Mold
Uses three plates to separate parts from sprue and
runner when mold opens
Advantages over two-plate mold:
As mold opens, runner and parts disconnect and drop
into two containers under mold
Allows automatic operation of molding machine
64
Hot-Runner Mold
Eliminates solidification of sprue and runner by
locating heaters around the corresponding runner
channels
While plastic in mold cavity solidifies, material in
sprue and runner channels remains molten, ready to
be injected into cavity in next cycle
Advantage:
Saves material that otherwise would be scrap in the unit
operation
65
Injection Molding Machines
Injection molding machines differ in both injection
unit and clamping unit
Name of injection molding machine is based on the
type of injection unit used
Reciprocating-screw injection molding machine
Plunger-type injection molding machine
Several clamping designs
Mechanical (toggle)
Hydraulic
66
Shrinkage
Reduction in linear size during cooling from
molding to room temperature
Polymers have high thermal expansion
coefficients, so significant shrinkage occurs
during solidification and cooling in mold
Typical shrinkage values:
Plastic Shrinkage, mm/mm (in/in)
Nylon-6,6 0.020
Polyethylene 0.025
Polystyrene 0.004
PVC 0.005
67
Compensation for Shrinkage
Dimensions of mold cavity must be larger than
specified part dimensions:
Dc = Dp + DpS + DpS2
where Dc = dimension of cavity; Dp = molded part
dimension, and S = shrinkage value
Third term on right hand side corrects for shrinkage in
the shrinkage
68
Shrinkage Factors
Fillers in the plastic tend to reduce shrinkage
Injection pressure – higher pressures force more
material into mold cavity to reduce shrinkage
Compaction time - similar effect – longer time forces
more material into cavity to reduce shrinkage
Molding temperature - higher temperatures lower
polymer melt viscosity, allowing more material to be
packed into mold to reduce shrinkage
69
Thermoplastic Foam Injection
Molding
Molding of thermoplastic parts that possess
dense outer skin surrounding lightweight
foam center
Part has high stiffness-to-weight ratio suited to
structural applications
Produced either by introducing a gas into
molten plastic in injection unit or by mixing a
gas-producing ingredient with starting pellets
A small amount of melt is injected into mold
cavity, where it expands to fill cavity
Foam in contact with cold mold surface
collapses to form dense skin, while core retains
cellular structure
70
Injection Molding of Thermosets
Equipment and operating procedure must be
modified to avoid premature cross-linking of
TS polymer
Reciprocating-screw injection unit with
shorter barrel length
Temperatures in barrel are relatively low
Melt is injected into a heated mold, where
cross-linking occurs to cure the plastic
Curing in the mold is the most
time-consuming step in the cycle
Mold is then opened and part is removed
71
Reaction Injection Molding
Two highly reactive liquid ingredients are mixed and
immediately injected into a mold cavity where
chemical reactions leading to solidification occur
RIM was developed with polyurethane to produce
large automotive parts such as bumpers and fenders
RIM polyurethane parts possess a foam internal
structure surrounded by a dense outer skin
Other materials used in RIM: epoxies, and
urea-formaldehyde
72
Compression Molding
A widely used molding process for thermosetting
plastics
Also used for rubber tires and polymer matrix
composite parts
Molding compound available in several forms:
powders or pellets, liquid, or preform
Amount of charge must be precisely controlled to
obtain repeatable consistency in the molded product
73
Compression Molding
74
Molds for Compression
Molding
Simpler than injection molds
No sprue and runner system in a compression mold
Process itself generally limited to simpler part
geometries due to lower flow capabilities of TS
materials
Mold must be heated, usually by electric resistance,
steam, or hot oil circulation
75
Compression Molding
Molding materials:
Phenolics, melamine, urea-formaldehyde, epoxies,
urethanes, and elastomers
Typical compression-molded products:
Electric plugs, sockets, and housings; pot handles, and
dinnerware plates
76
Transfer Molding
TS charge is loaded into a chamber immediately ahead
of mold cavity, where it is heated; pressure is then
applied to force soft polymer to flow into heated mold
where it cures
Two variants:
Pot transfer molding - charge is injected from a "pot"
through a vertical sprue channel into cavity
Plunger transfer molding – plunger injects charge from a
heated well through channels into cavity
77
Pot Transfer Molding
Figure 13.29 (a) Pot transfer molding: (1) charge is loaded
into pot, (2) softened polymer is pressed into mold cavity
and cured, and (3) part is ejected.
78
Plunger Transfer Molding
79
Compression vs. Transfer Molding
81
Blow Molding Process
Accomplished in two steps:
1. Fabrication of a starting tube, called a parison
2. Inflation of the tube to desired final shape
Forming the parison is accomplished by either
Extrusion or
Injection molding
82
Extrusion Blow Molding
Figure 13.30 Extrusion blow molding: (1) extrusion of parison; (2)
parison is pinched at the top and sealed at the bottom around a
metal blow pin as the two halves of the mold come together; (3) the
tube is inflated so that it takes the shape of the mold cavity; and (4)
mold is opened to remove the solidified part.
83
Injection Blow Molding
84
Stretch Blow Molding
Variation of injection blow molding in which blowing
rod stretches the soft parison for a more favorable
stressing of polymer than conventional blow molding
Resulting structure is more rigid, more transparent,
and more impact resistant
Most widely used material is polyethylene
terephthalate (PET) which has very low permeability
and is strengthened by stretch blow molding
Combination of properties makes it ideal as container
for carbonated beverages
85
Stretch Blow Molding
86
Materials and Products in Blow
Molding
Blow molding is limited to thermoplastics
Materials: high density polyethylene, polypropylene
(PP), polyvinylchloride (PVC), and polyethylene
terephthalate
Products: disposable containers for beverages and
other liquid consumer goods, large shipping drums (55
gallon) for liquids and powders, large storage tanks
(2000 gallon), gasoline tanks, toys, and hulls for sail
boards and small boats
87
Thermoforming
Flat thermoplastic sheet or film is heated and deformed
into desired shape using a mold
Heating usually accomplished by radiant electric
heaters located on one or both sides of starting plastic
sheet or film
Widely used in packaging of products and to fabricate
large items such as bathtubs, contoured skylights, and
internal door liners for refrigerators
88
Vacuum Thermoforming
89
Vacuum Thermoforming
90
Vacuum Thermoforming
91
Vacuum Thermoforming
92
Negative Molds vs. Positive
Molds
Negative mold has concave cavity
Positive mold has convex shape
Both types are used in thermoforming
For positive mold, heated sheet is draped over convex
form and negative or positive pressure forces plastic
against mold surface
93
Vacuum Thermoforming
94
Vacuum Thermoforming
95
Materials for Thermoforming
Only thermoplastics can be thermoformed,
Extruded sheets of thermosetting or elastomeric
polymers have already been cross-linked and cannot be
softened by reheating
Common TP polymers: polystyrene, cellulose acetate,
cellulose acetate butyrate, ABS, PVC, acrylic
(polymethylmethacrylate), polyethylene, and
polypropylene
96
Applications of Thermoforming
97
Casting
98
Polymer Foam
A polymer-and-gas mixture that gives the material a
porous or cellular structure
Most common polymer foams: polystyrene
(Styrofoam, a trademark), polyurethane
Other polymers: natural rubber ("foamed rubber") and
polyvinylchloride (PVC)
99
Properties of a Foamed
Polymer
Low density
High strength per unit weight
Good thermal insulation
Good energy absorbing qualities
100
Classification of Polymer Foams
Elastomeric - matrix polymer is a rubber, capable of
large elastic deformation
Flexible - matrix is a highly plasticized polymer such as
soft PVC
Rigid - polymer is a stiff thermoplastic such as
polystyrene or a thermoset such as a phenolic
101
Applications of Polymer Foams
Characteristic properties of polymer foams, and the
ability to control elastic behavior by selection of base
polymer, make these materials suitable for certain
applications
Applications: hot beverage cups, heat insulating
structural materials, cores for structural panels,
packaging materials, cushion materials for furniture
and bedding, padding for automobile dashboards, and
products requiring buoyancy
102
Polymer Foam Structures
Figure 13.40 Two polymer foam structures: (a) closed cell and
(b) open cell.
103
Extrusion of Polystyrene Foams
Polystyrene (PS) is a thermoplastic polymer
A physical or chemical blowing agent is fed
into polymer melt near die end of extruder
barrel; thus, extrudate consists of expanded
polymer
Products: large sheets and boards that are
subsequently cut to size for heat insulation
panels and sections
104
Molding Processes for PS Foams
105
Shaping of Polyurethane Foams
Polyurethane can be thermosetting,
elastomer or thermoplastic (less common)
Polyurethane foam products are made in a
one-step process in which the two liquid
ingredients are mixed and immediately fed
into a mold or other form
Polymer is synthesized and part geometry
is created at the same time
Shaping processes for polyurethane foam:
Spraying
Pouring
106
Product Design Guidelines:
General
Strength and stiffness
Plastics are not as strong or stiff as metals
Avoid applications where high stresses will be
encountered
Creep resistance is also a limitation
Strength-to-weight ratios for some plastics are
competitive with metals in certain applications
107
Product Design Guidelines:
General
Impact Resistance
Capacity of plastics to absorb impact is generally good;
plastics compare favorably with most metals
Service temperatures
Limited relative to metals and ceramics
Thermal expansion
Dimensional changes due to temperature changes much
more significant than for metals
108
Product Design Guidelines:
General
Many plastics are subject to degradation from sunlight
and other forms of radiation
Some plastics degrade in oxygen and ozone
atmospheres
Plastics are soluble in many common solvents
Plastics are resistant to conventional corrosion
mechanisms that afflict many metals
109
Product Design Guidelines:
Extrusion
Wall thickness
Uniform wall thickness is desirable in an extruded cross
section
Variations in wall thickness result in non-uniform
plastic flow and uneven cooling which tend to warp
extrudate
110
Product Design Guidelines:
Extrusion
Hollow sections
Hollow sections complicate die design and plastic flow
Desirable to use extruded cross-sections that are not
hollow yet satisfy functional requirements
111
Product Design Guidelines:
Extrusion
Corners
Sharp corners, inside and outside, should be avoided in
extruded cross sections
They result in uneven flow during processing and stress
concentrations in the final product
112
Product Design Guidelines:
Moldings
Economic production quantities
Each part requires a unique mold, and the mold for any
molding process can be costly, particularly for injection
molding
Minimum production quantities for injection molding
are usually around 10,000 pieces
For compression molding, minimum quantities are
1000 parts, due to simpler mold designs
Transfer molding lies between injection molding and
compression molding
113
Product Design Guidelines:
Moldings
Part complexity
An advantage of plastic molding is that it allows
multiple functional features to be combined into one
part
Although more complex part geometries mean more
costly molds, it may nevertheless be economical to
design a complex molding if the alternative involves
many individual components that must be assembled
114
Product Design Guidelines:
Moldings
Wall thickness
Thick cross sections are wasteful of material, more likely
to cause warping due to shrinkage, and take longer to
harden
Reinforcing ribs
Achieves increased stiffness without excessive wall
thickness
Ribs should be made thinner than the walls they
reinforce to minimize sink marks on outside wall
115
Product Design Guidelines:
Moldings
Corner radii and fillets
Sharp corners, both external and internal, are
undesirable in molded parts
They interrupt smooth flow of the melt, tend to create
surface defects, and cause stress concentrations in the
part
Holes
Holes are quite feasible in plastic moldings, but they
complicate mold design and part removal
116
Product Design Guidelines:
Moldings
Draft
A molded part should be designed with a draft on its
sides to facilitate removal from mold
Especially important on inside wall of a cup-shaped part
because plastic contracts against positive mold shape
Recommended draft:
For thermosets, ~ 1/2 to 1
117
Product Design Guidelines:
Moldings
Tolerances
Although shrinkage is predictable under closely
controlled conditions, generous tolerances are desirable
for injection moldings because of
Variations in process parameters that affect shrinkage
118