Residual Stress, China Injection Mold Cooling Process

After-sales Service: 1year
Warranty: 1year, 1year
After-Sales Service: 1year
Shaping Mode: Injection Mould
Surface Finish Process: Painting
Mould Cavity: Multi Cavity
Customization:
Gold Member Since 2014

Suppliers with verified business licenses

Manufacturer/Factory & Trading Company

Basic Info.

Model NO.
Fl-34
Plastic Material
San
Process Combination Type
Single-Process Mode
Application
Household Appliances
Runner
Hot Runner
Design Software
Ug
Installation
Mobile
Certification
ISO
Standard
Hasco
Customized
Customized
OEM
Yes
Transport Package
Box
Specification
TBA
Trademark
Flying Eagle
Origin
China
HS Code
39231000
Production Capacity
100000PCS/Year

Product Description

Unbalanced cooling
from the mold wall to its center can cause thermal-induced residual stress. Furthermore, asymmetrical thermal-induced residual stress can occur if the cooling rate of the two surfaces is unbalanced. Such unbalanced cooling will result in an asymmetric tension-compression pattern across the part, causing a bending moment that tends to cause part warpage. This is illustrated in Figure 3 below. Consequently, parts with non-uniform thickness or poorly cooled areas are prone to unbalanced cooling, and thus to residual thermal stresses. For moderately complex parts, the thermal-induced  residual stress distribution is further complicated by non-uniform wall thickness, mold  cooling, and mold constraints to free contraction.
FIGURE 3. Asymmetrical thermal-induced residual stress caused by unbalanced cooling across the molded part thickness introduces part warpage
Variable frozen-in densities
The figure below illustrates the variation in frozen-in densities caused by the packing pressure history.
Temperature profile
The left figure plots the temperature profile at one location on the part. For the purpose of illustration, the part is divided into eight equal layers across the part thickness. The profile shows the temperature at the solidification (freeze-off) time instant for each layer (t1 to t8). Note that the material starts solidifying from the outer layers and the frozen interface moves inwards with time.
Pressure trace
The center figure plots a typical pressure history, showing the pressure levels (P1 to P8) as each layer solidifies. In general, the pressure gradually increases during filling, reaching a maximum in the early packing stage, and then starts to decay due to cooling and gate freeze-off. Accordingly, the material at the outer layers and center layers solidify when the pressure level is low, whereas the intermediate layers freeze under high packing pressure.
Frozen-in specific volume
The right figure depicts the specific volume trace for layer 5 on a pvT plot and the final frozen-in specific volumes for all the layers, marked by the numbered solid circles.
FIGURE 4. Factors that influence the development of "frozen-in" specific volume
Differential shrinkage
Given the frozen-in specific volumes, the various layers will shrink differently, according to the pvT curves that govern the material shrinkage behavior. Hypothetically, if each layer were detached from others (as shown in Figure 5) then material elements in the left figure below would have shrunk like those in the center figure. In this case, the intermediate layers tend to shrink less than the others because of lower frozen-in specific volume (or, equivalently, higher frozen-in density). In reality, all the layers are bound together. Therefore, the end result will be a compromised shrinkage distribution with intermediate layers being compressed and outer and center layers being stretched.

Send your message to this supplier

*From:
*To:
*Message:

Enter between 20 to 4,000 characters.

This is not what you are looking for? Post a Sourcing Request Now

You Might Also Like

Gold Member Since 2014

Suppliers with verified business licenses

Manufacturer/Factory & Trading Company
Management System Certification
ISO 9001, ISO 14001, IATF16949
OEM/ODM Availability
Yes