Abstract

Precision injection moulding of thin walled parts has become an important concern in the computer, communication, and consumer electronics plastics industry. Previous studies in precision injection moulding control focus on the injection screw and the associated operations. In the present study, the influence of relevant parameters including injection speed, melt temperature, mould temperature, filling-packing switchover, and packing pressure on the mould plate separation under different clamping pressure were investigated as part of precision moulding control. A two cavity tensile test specimen mould equipped with four linear variable displacement transducers across the parting surfaces of the mould was used. A computer based monitoring system was built to detect the mould separation signals. Mould separation can also be identified from part weight and thickness variation and exhibits relevant correspondence with them. It was found that owing to the high injection speed required for thin wall moulding, mould separation is not negligible. In all situations, mould separation decreases with increasing clamping pressure. As melttemperature andmouldtemperatureincrease,mouldseparationincreases, resulting in an increase in part weight and thickness. Similarly, when packing pressure and injection speed increase, mould separation also increases. Earlier switchover from filling to packing can decrease mould separation as well as part weight and thickness. Among all the parameters studied, packing pressure exhibits the greatest influence on mould separation and on the associated weight and thickness change. This influence also becomes larger when the moulded part becomes thinner, owing to the larger injection moulding pressure. PRC/1746

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