Injection Mould Design For PVC
Injection Mould Design For PVC
Injection Mould Design For PVC
´ MACHINE RECCOMENDATIONS
´ PVC requires reciprocating screw injection moulding machine with a plasticising screw to produce homogeneous melt.
´ It is recommended that a shot weight of the part should take two thirds of the rated barrel capacity to reduce melt exposure to
residence time during part cooling phase. This also enables processing at higher temperatures while avoiding degradation.
´ Clamp force required for PVC is 300 - 400kg/cm2 (2 - 3ton/square inch) of projected part area, including runners.
INJECTION MOULD DESIGN: MARPLEX PVC RESINS
´ SCREW DESIGN
´ Compression ratios of 2.0/0.1 to 3.0/0.1 and L/D ratio of 16/1 to 24/1.
´ To reduce PVC degrading or adhering to the screw surface and to protect against chemical attack, screws must be deep nitrided
to 67 Rockwell C. Flame hardened screws should be chrome plated and polished but are not as resistant to wear.
´ Two types of screw tips are recommended, for large thin walled parts a sliding check ring type with easy flow material. For mid
flow material a smear head tip is preferred.
INJECTION MOULD DESIGN: MARPLEX PVC RESINS
´ NOZZLE
´ Short as possible nozzle length.
´ Own temperature control.
´ Thermocouple monitoring nozzle temperature.
´ Solid state, temperature controllers.
´ Reverse taper nozzle highly recommended with zero land to reduce shear.
´ Reverse taper nozzle promotes sprue break off in nozzle, preventing site for degraded material.
´ Nozzle orifice diameter should be 6mm minimum. Generous orifice, runners and gates prevent short shots and shear burn.
´ No shear edges should be formed at the nozzle rear opening or orifice / sprue bushing.
INJECTION MOULD DESIGN: MARPLEX PVC RESINS
´ MOULD DESIGN
´ 420 stainless steel is recommended for mould core and cavities. Moving parts should be made of hardened steel and plated.
´ Prehardened and conventional hardened steel can be used if material contact areas are plated.
´ Multiple layer chrome plating has good resistance to hydrochloric acid.
´ Conventional two and three plate mould can be used.
´ Draft of 0.50 – 10 per side per 0.001”. Harder plastic may require more draft.
´ Tool should be cut with shrinkage of 0.002-0.005cm/cm. Actual shrinkage is dependant on cavity pressure.
´ PVC moulds must be vented, otherwise trapped air, gas or moisture can become super heated under compression causing
burning.
´ Vent sizes generally 6mm – 13mm wide by 0.01mm -0.03mm deep, located on the mating surface of the mould halves.
´ GATE DESIGN
´ All gates with generous cross-sectional area work well with PVC. This allows the material to flow freely with minimum pressure
loss and shear build up. The gates should be polished smooth with all rough edges and sharp corners removed.
´ Typical gate designs that work well are low restrictive gates such as direct sprue, fan, tab, chisel, reverse chisel, diaphragm
gates.
´ Sub, pin, flash gates are not recommended due to the high viscosity nature of PVC and the sensitivity to shear. If these designs
are needed please consult MARPLEX technical service department.
INJECTION MOULD DESIGN: MARPLEX PVC RESINS
´ PROCESSING CONDTIONS
´ PVC has a low moisture sensitivity, however better result can be seen when PVC is dried for 2 hours in a dehumidified dryer at
65-75OC.
´ Mould temperature should be tightly controlled between 21-38OC with good water flow. The ejector side of the mould is
generally 5OC lower than the stationary side of the mould to help with part removal. If parts are thick chilled water of below 21OC
can be used.
´ Melt Temperature is critical in moulding PVC. Melt temperature is different from heater band temperature. To measure melt
temperature a needle-probe pyrometer must be used.
´ The recommended melt temperature of PVC is 199-210OC but should never exceed 216OC.
´ To find these readings using a pyrometer, undertake some air shots onto some cardboard and place the probe into the melt.
This will give a reading of about 10OC below actual melt temperature.
´ Heater band temperature may be as follows: Nozzle 185OC, Zone 1 170OC, Zone 2 160OC, Zone 3 150OC. This would give a
melt temperature of approximately 200OC. The extra heat from the material comes from shear, back pressure and screw RPM.
´ Screw back pressure will vary from machine to machine, usually between 0.3 – 0.7MPa range.
´ Screw RPM is generally 40 to 50 RPM with larger machines requiring less.
´ Injection speed should be slow to moderate to prevent excessive frictional heat.
´ Injection pressure is in the range of 50-75% of the maximum available then when the part is full switches to holding pressure
which is 0.5 – 0.75 of the injection pressure. Over packing the part increases moulded in stress and should be avoided.
´ Sink marks opposite the gate indicate more injection pressure/time is needed, sink marks near the gate indicate more hold
pressure/time.
INJECTION MOULD DESIGN: MARPLEX PVC RESINS
´ PURGING
´ It is important to purge barrel of injection moulder with GP ABS, Acrylic, Polystyrene before and after the use of PVC
compounds.
´ The injection moulding machine must not be shut down with PVC in the barrel.
´ If material is left in the barrel it will degrade and the screw and barrel will have to be removed and cleaned mechanically.
´ The use of Polyethylene and polypropylene and not recommended due to they are immiscible with PVC.
´ Warning
´ PVC must never come into contact with Acetal copolymers within an extruder or moulding machine. The two material will rapidly
degrade. Traces quantities will be enough to cause degradation.
´ The content of this report is based on test methods and results we believe reliable, but any results or
recommendations contained should not be construed as a guarantee of final product performance by Marplex
Australia Pty Ltd.