The Injection Speed in Injection Molding

What are the relationship between injection speed in injection molding and the quality of injection molded parts?

The Injection Speed in Injection Molding and Injection Molded Parts - DGMF Mold Clamps Co., Ltd

The relationship between injection speed in injection molding and the quality of injection molded parts is a close relationship between injection speed in injection molding and product quality, making it a key parameter for injection molding.

By determining the beginning, middle, and end of the filling injection speed in the injection molding segment and achieving a smooth transition from one set point to another, a stable melt surface velocity can be ensured to produce the desired molecular fetch and minimum internal stress.

This velocity injection speed in the injection molding segmentation principle is recommended.

The velocity of the fluid surface should be constant.

Rapid injection should be used to prevent melt freezing during the injection process.

The injection speed in the injection molding setting should consider a fast filling in the critical area (e.g., runners) while slowing down at the inlet level.

The injection speed in injection molding should be such that the cavity is filled and stopped immediately to prevent overfilling flying edges and residual stresses.

The basis for setting injection speed in injection molding segments must consider the mold geometry, other flow constraints, and instabilities. The injection speed in injection molding must be set with a clear understanding of the injection molding process and material knowledge. Otherwise, the quality of the product will be difficult to control.

Because the melt flow rate is difficult to measure directly, it can be indirectly deduced by measuring the forward screw speed or cavity pressure (to ensure there is no check valve leakage).

Material properties are important because polymers may degrade due to different stresses.

Increasing the molding temperature may lead to intense oxidation and degradation of the chemical structure. At the same time, degradation due to shear is less because high temperatures reduce the viscosity of the material and decrease the shear stress.

Multi-stage injection speeds are useful for molding heat-sensitive materials such as PC, POM, and UPVC and their blending.

The geometry of the mold is also a determining factor.

Thin-walled areas require maximum injection speed in injection molding; thick-walled parts require slow, fast, and slow-type speed profiles to avoid defects.

To ensure that the quality of the part is up to standard, the injection speed in injection molding should be set so that the melt front flow rate is constant.

The melt flow rate is very important because it affects the molecular alignment direction and surface state in part; the melt front should be slowed down when it reaches the cross-area structure.

A proportional increase in melt throughput should be ensured for complex molds with radial diffusion.

Long runners must be filled quickly to reduce cooling of the melt front, except injecting high-viscosity materials, such as PC, where too fast a speed can bring cold material into the cavity through the inlet.

Adjusting the injection speed in injection molding can help eliminate defects caused by slowing flow at the inlet level.

As the melt passes through the nozzle and runner to the inlet, the surface of the melt front may have cooled and solidified, or the melt may stagnate due to the sudden narrowing of the runner until enough pressure is built up to push the melt through the inlet, which can cause the pressure through the inlet to the peak.

The high pressure will damage the material and cause surface defects such as flow marks and inlet scorch, which can be overcome by slowing down just before the inlet.

This deceleration prevents excessive shearing at the entry point and then increases the injection rate to the original value. Since it is very difficult to precisely control the injection speed to slow down at the inlet level, deceleration at the end of the runner is a better solution.

We can avoid or reduce defects such as fluttering, scorching, and air trapping by controlling the injection speed at the end of the runner. Deceleration at the end of filling can prevent overfilling of the cavity, avoid flying edges and reduce residual stress.

Air trapping caused by poor venting or filling problems at the end of the mold flow path can also be solved by reducing the venting speed, especially at the end of the injection stage.

The short shot is caused by slow speed at the inlet or local blockage of flow caused by melt solidification. This problem can be solved by speeding up the injection speed after the water inlet or when the local flow is obstructed.

Defects that occur in heat-sensitive materials, such as flow marks, inlet scorch, molecular breakage, delamination, and flaking, are caused by excessive shear when passing through the inlet.

Smooth parts depend on injection speed in injection molding, and glass-filled materials are particularly sensitive, especially nylon. Dark spots (wavy patterns) are caused by flow instability due to changes in viscosity.

Distorted flow can lead to wavy patterns or uneven haze, and the exact defect produced depends on the degree of flow instability.

High-speed injection as the melt passes through the inlet can result in high shear, and thermosensitive plastics will experience scorching. This scorched material will travel through the cavity to the flow front and present itself on the part surface.

To prevent shot ripples, the injection speed in the injection molding setting must ensure that the runner area is filled quickly and then passed through the inlet slowly. Finding this speed transition point is the essence of the problem.

If it is too early, the fill time will increase excessively; if it is too late, excessive flow inertia will lead to the appearance of shot lines. The lower the melt viscosity and the higher the barrel temperature, the more pronounced the tendency for this shot pattern to appear.

Small inlets are also important in flow defects because they require high-speed and high-pressure injection.

Shrinkage can be improved by more efficient pressure transfer and smaller pressure drops. Low mold temperature and slow screw advancement greatly shorten the flow length and must be compensated for by high injection velocities.

High flow speeds reduce heat loss and can cause an increase in melt temperature due to high shear heat-generating frictional heat, slowing the thickening of the outer layer of the part.

The cavity crossover must be thick enough to avoid too large a pressure drop. Otherwise, shrinkage will occur.

In short, most injection defects can be solved by adjusting the injection speed in injection molding, so adjusting the injection process is setting the injection speed in injection molding and its segmentation reasonably.

What are the respective benefits of high or low injection speed in injection molding?

The most important process conditions in the injection molding process are the temperature, pressure, speed, and the corresponding individual action time that affect the plasticizing flow and cooling.

These factors, in turn, affect and constrain each other, such as increasing the melt and mold temperature, it is possible to reduce the injection pressure and speed, etc., and vice versa, it is necessary to increase the injection pressure and speed.

The core of the influence of various process conditions lies in the change of plastic viscosity, which is crucial for the reasonable selection of parameters in the injection process and their influence on each other.

Characteristics of high and low injection speed in injection molding

The following advantages exist for using high injection speeds in the injection process.

(1) Reduction of injection time and shortening of the molding cycle.

(2) Improving the flow of plastics and facilitating the molding of thin-walled parts.

(3) Improving the surface gloss of the product.

(4) It can improve the strength of the fusion line and make the fusion pattern less obvious.

(5) Prevents the generation of cooling deformation, etc.

The advantages of low injection speed in the injection molding process are as follows.

(1) Preventing the generation of flying edges in molded products.

(2) Preventing the generation of jet lines and flow lines.

(3) Preventing the production of burn marks.

(4) Prevention of air entrapment in the plastic melt.

(5) Prevention of molecular orientation deformation, etc.

The advantages of high-speed injection are also the disadvantages of low-injection speed in injection molding and vice versa.

Therefore, the combination of high speed and low speed in the injection process can make full use of their respective advantages and avoid their respective disadvantages, thus ensuring the quality of the product and the economy of the process.

We usually refer to this as multi-stage injection technology, which has been commonly used in modern injection molding machines.

At present, most medium-sized injection molding machines have five to six injection pressure, injection speed in injection molding changes, and three to four pressure-holding pressure changes。

Because of the pressure-holding stage, the melt has been filled with the cavity, and the melt through the pressure-holding pressure into the cavity of the complementary shrinkage material has been limited, so the impact of pressure-holding speed is not significant.

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