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1.
This article is principally concerned with the morphology and crystallinity of isotactic polypropylene (iPP) parts molded by injection molding, during which a self‐interference flow (SIF) occurs for the melt in the cavity. Scanning electron microscopy shows that a transverse flow takes place in SIF samples. Wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry show that SIF moldings exhibit a γ phase, in addition to α and β phases, and high crystallinity. Meanwhile, the results for iPP moldings made by the conventional flow process, that is, conventional injection molding, are reported for comparison. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 88: 2791–2796, 2003  相似文献   

2.
Previously, bi‐axial self‐reinforcement of high‐density polyethylene (HDPE) was achieved through a uni‐axial shear stress field introduced by dynamic packing injection molding technology. Here, further improvement of tensile strength along the flow direction (MD) was achieved by blending a small amount of high‐molecular‐weight polyethylene (HMWPE) with HDPE, while the tensile strength along the transverse direction (TD) still substantially exceeded that of conventional moldings. Tensile strengths in both flow and transverse directions were considerably enhanced, with improvements from 23 MPa to 76 MPa in MD and from 23 MPa to 31 MPa in TD. The effect of HMWPE content and molding parameters on tensile properties was also investigated. The tensile strength along MD was highly dependent on HMWPE content, oscillating cycle, mold temperature, melt temperature and packing pressure, while that along TD was insensitive to composition and processing parameters within the selected design space. According to the stress–strain curves, samples with HMWPE produced by dynamic packing injection molding had a special tensile failure mode in MD, different from both typical plastic and brittle failure modes. There were no yielding and necking phenomena, which are characteristic during tensile testing of plastic materials, but there was still a considerably higher elongation compared to those of brittle materials. However, in TD, all dynamic injection molding samples exhibited plastic failure as did typical conventional injection molding samples. Copyright © 2006 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

3.
The effects of processing and part geometry on the local mechanical properties of injection‐molded, 30 wt% short‐fiber‐reinforced filled poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) are characterized by mechanical tests on specimens cut from rectangular plaques of different thicknesses injection molded at several different processing conditions. Stiffness data from tensile tests at 12.7‐mm intervals on 12.7‐mm‐wide strips cut from injection‐molded plaques—both along the flow and cross‐flow directions—and flexural tests on these strips show consistency of plaque‐to‐plaque local properties. Also, in addition to the well‐known anisotropic properties caused by flow‐induced fiber orientation, injection‐molded short fiber composites exhibit in‐plane and through‐thickness nonhomogeneity—as indicated by in‐plane property variations, by differences between tensile and flexural properties, and by the flexural strength being significantly higher than the tensile strength. The sensitivity of these mechanical properties to process conditions and plaque geometry have also been determined: the flow‐direction tensile modulus increases with fill time, the differences between flow and cross‐flow properties decrease with increasing thickness, and both the flow and cross‐flow flexural moduli decrease with increasing plaque thickness. While the flexural modulus is comparable to the tensile modulus, the flexural strength is significantly higher than the tensile strength. POLYM. COMPOS., 26:428–447, 2005. © 2005 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

4.
Uniaxial oscillating stress field by dynamic packing injection molding (DPIM) is well established as a means of producing uniaxially self‐reinforced polyethylene and polypropylene. Here, the effects on the mechanical properties of high‐density polyethylene (HDPE) in both flow direction (MD) and transverse direction (TD) of packing modules and processing parameters in DPIM are described. Both biaxially and uniaxially self‐reinforced HDPE samples are obtained by uniaxial shear injection molding. The most remarkable biaxially self‐reinforced HDPE specimens show a 42% increase of the tensile strength in both MD and TD. The difference of stress–strain behavior and impact strength between MD and TD for the DPIM moldings indicates the asymmetry of microstructure in the two directions. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 93: 1584–1590, 2004  相似文献   

5.
Interfacial agents as compatibilizers have recently been introduced into polymer blends to improve the microstructure and mechanical properties of thermoplastics. In this way, it is possible to prepare a mixture of polymeric materials that can have superior mechanical properties over a wide temperature range. In this study, an incompatible blend of polypropylene (PP) and polyamide‐6 (PA6) were made compatible by the addition of 10% styrene–ethylene–butadiene–styrene copolymer (SEBS). The mixing operation was conducted by using a twin‐screw extruder. The morphology and the compatibility of the mixtures were examined by SEM and DSC techniques. Furthermore, the elastic modulus, tensile and yield strengths, percentage elongation, hardness, melt flow index, Izod impact resistance, heat deflection temperature (HDT), and Vicat softening point values of polymer alloys of various ratios were determined. It was found that the addition of SEBS to the structures decreased the tensile strength, yield strength, elastic modulus, and hardness, whereas it increased the Izod impact strength and percentage elongation values. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 89: 3485–3491, 2003  相似文献   

6.
This research explores the longitudinal and latitudinal mechanical properties of injection‐molded isotactic polypropylene (iPP) prepared in a uniaxial oscillating stress field by oscillating packing injection molding (OPIM). The methods, processing conditions, and mechanical test results for iPP by conventional injection molding (CIM) and OPIM are described. The mechanical properties in the flow direction (MD) and transverse direction (TD) of the OPIM moldings indicate three types of self‐reinforced iPP moldings. The pronounced biaxially self‐reinforced iPP specimens exhibit a 55–70% increase of the tensile strength and more than a fourfold increase of the impact strength in the MD, together with more than a 40% increase of the tensile strength and a 30–40% increase of the impact strength in the TD. The OPIM moldings show different stress–strain behavior in the MD and TD. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 78: 1906–1910, 2000  相似文献   

7.
叶志殷 《中国塑料》2020,34(9):56-60
以高密度聚乙烯(PE-HD)为原料,采用自行设计加工的一套1模4腔注射标准试样模具进行注塑,通过调整熔体温度、模具温度和注射压力等工艺参数,考察了不同浇口截面尺寸的模具对注塑样品拉伸、冲击和弯曲性能的影响。结果表明,模具浇口截面尺寸修改后,注射试样的力学性能明显提升,其中,拉伸强度、冲击强度、弯曲强度和弯曲模量最高分别提升了3.40 %、79.86 %、18.11 %和113.36 %;模具浇口修改后注塑所的样品充填饱满,无塌陷等缺陷;修改浇口后的模具设计整体结构布局合理,可为同类标准测试样的成型模具设计提供有益借鉴。  相似文献   

8.
The thermal, mechanical, and rheological properties of glass‐filled poly(propylene terephthalate) (GF PPT) were compared to glass‐filled poly(butylene terephthalate) (GF PBT). The impetus for this study was the recent commercial interest in PPT as a new glass‐reinforced thermoplastic for injection‐molding applications. This article represents the first systematic comparison of the properties of GF PPT and GF PBT in which differences in properties can be attributed solely to differences in the polyester matrices, that is, glass‐fiber size and composition, polymer melt viscosity, nucleant content and composition, polymerization catalyst composition and content, and processing conditions were kept constant. Under these controlled conditions, GF PPT showed marginally higher tensile and flexural properties and significantly lower impact strength compared to GF PBT. The crystallization behavior observed by cooling from the melt at a constant rate showed that GF PBT crystallized significantly faster than did GF PPT. Nucleation of GF PPT with either talc or sodium stearate increased the rate of crystallization, but not to the level of GF PBT. The slower crystallization rate of GF PPT was found to strongly affect thermomechanical properties of injection‐molded specimens. For example, increasing the polymer molecular weight and decreasing the mold temperature significantly increased the modulus drop associated with the glass transition. In contrast, the modulus–temperature response of GF PBT was just marginally influenced by the polymer molecular weight and was essentially independent of the mold temperature. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 74: 889–899, 1999  相似文献   

9.
Two series of polypropylenes with different molecular weight distribution and tacticity characteristics were injection molded into flexural test specimens by varying cylinder temperature and the effects of the molecular weight distribution and tacticity on the structure and properties of the moldings were studied. Measured propertied were flexural modulus, flexural strength, heat distortion temperature, Izod impact strength, and mold shrinkage and structures studied were crystallinity, the thickness of skin layer, a*‐axis‐oriented component fraction and crystalline orientation functions. The relations between the structures and properties were also studied. It was found that the molecular weight distribution and tacticity characteristics affect the properties mainly through the molecular orientation and crystallinity, respectively. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 84: 2142–2156, 2002  相似文献   

10.
The correlation between structure development during injection molding and the modulus of injection molded PET/LCP blends were studied. Process parameters such as injection speed and mold and melt temperatures were varied to determine the effect of these parameters on the tensile modulus and structure development of the blends. The skin/core structure in the cross section of injection molded samples was observed with both optical and scanning electron microscopy techniques. Injection molding experiments show that the thickness of the skin layer increases with decreasing injection speed and decreasing melt and mold temperatures. The trends in morphological developments in the injection molded specimens correlate with the measured tensile moduli.  相似文献   

11.
Weld lines, created in the areas of collision of two flow fronts of plastic in the injection mold cavity, are the reason of lower mechanical properties and a worse surface condition of molded parts. In the weld line area, the V‐shaped notch is formed and its shape and size depend on injection molding conditions and properties of processed polymer. Addition of the foaming agent to the polymer can be one of the way to improve conditions of melt streams welding due to the higher velocity of the colliding streams of unfilled polypropylene (PP) and PP filled with talc. The examinations of mechanical properties showed, however, lower tensile strength of porous parts compared to solid ones, but in the microscopic observation and measurements of the geometric structure of moldings, in the weld lines area, better surface conditions were achieved for samples made of the foamed polypropylene. The size of V‐notch, determined by the total height of the raw profile Pt, depends also on the length of polymer flow path from the gate to the weld line area. The values of Pt parameter increase with the length of the flow path, but this increase is smaller for foamed polypropylene. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 59:1710–1718 2019. © 2019 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

12.
In the sandwich injection molding process (co‐injection), two different polymer melts are sequentially injected into a mold to form a part with a skin/core structure. Sandwich molding can be used for recycling, improving barrier and electrical properties, or producing parts with tailored mechanical properties. In this study the evaluation of flexural modulus and impact strength of co‐injected plaques have been investigated. Virgin and short glass fiber reinforced (10 and 40%) polypropylene were used in six different combinations of sandwiched layers. The skin and core thicknesses were measured by optical microscopy and used to calculate the theoretical flexural modulus, which was compared to the experimentally measured modulus. Fiber orientation states were also observed by scanning electronic microscopy (SEM) at some specific locations and their effect on mechanical properties discussed. The experimental results indicate that an important improvement in transverse modulus, near the gate, is obtained when the virgin polypropylene (PP) is used as a skin and 40% short glass fiber polypropylene (PP40) as core. When both skin and core are made of PP40, the flexural moduli are slightly higher than conventionally injected PP40. POLYM. COMPOS. 26:265–275, 2005. © 2005 Society of Plastics Engineers.  相似文献   

13.
A commercial thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer (LCP), Vectra A950, was injection molded into rectangular sheets of thickness ranging from 1 to 4 mm. By changing the thickness of the mold, the shear rate experienced by the TLCP melt in the mold could be varied. The 1‐mm test sample was highly anisotropic while that with larger thickness (4 mm) was less anisotropic. X‐ray diffraction profile at various depths for each of the test sample corresponded to the degree in the fiber orientation present in the test samples. The anisotropy can be described macroscopically by measuring the tensile strength and modulus in the longitudinal and transverse direction. The ratio between the longitudinal and transverse property decreases proportionally to the thickness of the test sample. This reduction corresponded to the reduction in the shear field as the thickness of the mold was increased. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 88: 1713–1718, 2003  相似文献   

14.
A numerical algorithm is developed to simulate the injection–compression molding (ICM) process. A Hele–Shaw fluid‐flow model combined with a modified control‐volume/finite‐element method is implemented to predict the melt‐front advancement and the distributions of pressure, temperature, and flow velocity dynamically during the injection melt filling, compression melt filling, and postfilling stages of the entire process. Part volumetric shrinkage was then investigated by tracing the thermal–mechanical history of the polymer melt via a path display in the pressure–volume–temperature (PVT) diagram during the entire process. Influence of the process parameters including compression speed, switch time from injection to compression, compression stroke, and part thickness on part shrinkage were understood through simulations of a disk part. The simulated results were also compared with those required by conventional injection molding (CIM). It was found that ICM not only shows a significant effect on reducing part shrinkage but also provides much more uniform shrinkage within the whole part as compared with CIM. Although using a higher switch time, lower compression speed, and higher compression stroke may result in a lower molding pressure, however, they do not show an apparent effect on part shrinkage once the compression pressure is the same in the compression‐holding stage. However, using a lower switch time, higher compression speed, and lower compression stroke under the same compression pressure in the postfilling stage will result in an improvement in shrinkage reduction due to the melt‐temperature effect introduced in the end of the filling stage. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 75: 1640–1654, 2000  相似文献   

15.
This work studies the effect of processing parameters on mechanical properties and material distribution of co‐injected polymer blends within a complex mold shape. A partially bio‐sourced blend of poly(butylene terephthalate) and poly(trimethylene terephthalate) PTT/PBT was used for the core, with a tough biodegradable blend of poly (butylene succinate) and poly (butylene adipate‐co‐terephthalate) PBS/PBAT for the skin. A ½ factorial design of experiments is used to identify significant processing parameters from skin and core melt temperatures, injection speed and pressure, and mold temperature. Interactions between the processing effects are considered, and the resulting statistical data produced accurate linear models indicating that the co‐injection of the two blends can be controlled. Impact strength of the normally brittle PTT/PBT blend is shown to increase significantly with co‐injection and variations in core to skin volume ratios to have a determining role in the overall impact strength. Scanning electron microscope images were taken of co‐injected tensile samples with the PBS/PBAT skin dissolved displaying variations of mechanical interlocking occurring between the two blends. © 2014 The Authors Journal of Applied Polymer Science Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 2015 , 132, 41278.  相似文献   

16.
Simulations are often used to model polymer flow during injection molding to design molds and select processing parameters. It is difficult to determine the accuracy of these simulations due to a lack of experimentally measured in‐mold velocimetry and melt‐front progression data. This article compares the results from commercial mold‐filling simulation software to experimental data obtained via particle image velocimetry (PIV) in a special optical‐access mold with a rectangular cavity. Moldflow was used to simulate the mold filling by a polystyrene melt in the experimental configuration, and these simulated results are compared to the appropriately averaged time‐varying velocity field measurements. Simulated results for melt‐front progression are also compared with experimentally observed flow fronts. The ratio of the experimentally measured average velocity magnitudes to the simulation magnitudes was found on average to be 0.99 with a standard deviation of 0.25, and the difference in velocity orientations was found to be 0.9° with a standard deviation of 3.2°. The corner area opposite the gate was most problematic for the simulation. The region behind the front also had a relatively high simulation error, though not as severe as that in the corner. POLYM. ENG. SCI. 2013. © 2012 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

17.
Ultra‐high‐molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) powder was processed using injection molding (IM) with different cavity thicknesses and injection‐compression molding (ICM). The processing parameters of feeding the powders were optimized to ensure proper dosage and avoid jeopardizing the UHMWPE molecular structure. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) and Fourier‐transform infrared spectroscopy tests confirmed that the thermal and oxidative degradations of the material were avoided but crosslinking was induced during melt processing. Tensile tests and impact tests showed that the ICM samples were superior to those of IM. Increased cavity thickness and ICM were helpful for reducing the injection pressure and improving the mechanical properties due to effective packing of the material. Short shot molding showed that the UHMWPE melt did not exhibit the typical progressive and smooth melt front advancements. Due to its highly entangled polymer chains structure, it entered the cavity as an irregular porous‐like structure, as shown by short shots and micro‐computed tomography scans. A delamination skin layer (around 300‐μm thick and independent of cavity thickness) was formed on all IM sample surfaces while it was absent in the ICM samples, suggesting two different flow behaviors between IM and ICM during the packing phase. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 59:E170–E179, 2019. © 2018 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

18.
用注塑成型方法制备了抗冲嵌段共聚聚丙(烯PP-B)试样,研究了工艺条件的改变对PP-B力学性能的影响。结果表明:注射速率和模具温度与PP-B弯曲强度、弯曲模量成正相关,而与冲击强度、拉伸强度的关系较为复杂;模具温度的升高有利于结晶度的提高,PP-B刚性上升,韧性下降;注射速率改变引起的剪切、拉伸流动使熔体发生取向流动,从而使沿取向方向上的强度升高,垂直取向方向上的强度降低;保压压力对PP-B性能的影响主要是通过熔体非晶部分在保压阶段的分子定向作用来实现的,随着保压时间的延长,PP-B塑件密度提高缺,陷减少拉,伸强度弯、曲模量呈增大趋势。  相似文献   

19.
Wood‐fiber‐reinforced plastic profiles are growing rapidly in nonstructural wood‐replacement applications. Most manufacturers are evaluating new alternative foamed composites, which are lighter and more like wood. Foamed wood composites accept screws and nails better than their nonfoamed counterparts, and they have other advantages as well. For example, internal pressures created by foaming give better surface definition and sharper contours and corners than nonfoamed profiles have. In this study, the microfoaming of polypropylene (PP) containing hardwood fiber was performed with an injection‐molding process. The effects of different chemical foaming agents (endothermic, exothermic, and endothermic/exothermic), injection parameters (the mold temperature, front flow speed, and filling quantity), and different types of PP (different melt‐flow indices) on the density, microvoid content, physicomechanical properties, surface roughness, and microcell classification of microfoamed PP/wood‐fiber composites were studied. A maleic anhydride/polypropylene copolymer (MAH‐PP) compatibilizer was used with the intention of improving the mechanical properties of microfoamed composites. The microcell classification (from light microscopy) and scanning electron micrographs showed that an exothermic chemical foaming agent produced the best performance with respect to the cell size, diameter, and distance. The polymer melt‐flow index and the variation of the injection parameters affected the properties and microstructure of the microfoamed composites. The density of the microfoamed hardwood‐fiber/PP (with a high melt‐flow index) composites was reduced by approximately 30% and decreased to 0.718 g/cm3 with an exothermic chemical foaming agent. Tensile and flexural tests were performed on the foamed composites to determine the dependence of the mechanical properties on the density and microvoid content of the foamed specimens, and these properties were compared with those of nonfoamed composites. MAH‐PP improved the physicomechanical properties up to 80%. With an increase in the mold temperature (80–110°C), the surface roughness was reduced by nearly 70% for the foamed composites. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 97: 1090–1096, 2005  相似文献   

20.
Weld or knit lines result wherever two or more polymer flow fronts unite. This results in a region of a different level of molecular entanglements than the bulk material. Consequently, weld regions have been observed to have inferior mechanical properties compared to the bulk. Although this phenomenon occurs in almost all the commercially important polymer processes, there has been little systematic investigation. The effects of melt temperature, mold temperature, injection speed and injection pressure on the tensile properties of commercial grades of polystyrene (GPS), high impact polystyrene (HIPS) and polypropylene (PP) are examined. The most important processing parameters seemed to be melt and mold temperature; injection speed and pressure had little effect on the tensile properties of any of the samples. A higher melt temperature increased both the strain and stress at break considerably in GPS. In HIPS increased melt temperature increased only the elongation to break substantially. Increased mold temperature improved the stress and elongation to break in GPS but not as much as melt temperature. Polypropylene showed improved weld yield strength with increased mold temperature. Under the conditions examined, injection pressure and injection speed showed no effect on the tensile properties of any of the materials investigated.  相似文献   

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