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High-Speed, Thin- Wall Molding Doesn't Need an Accumulator.


Forget about using a gas accumulator A hardware register used to hold the results or partial results of arithmetic and logical operations.

(processor) accumulator - In a central processing unit, a register in which intermediate results are stored.
 or a special beefed-up machine to fill thin-wall parts fast. Just let the melt do all the work!

That's the message behind a new approach to high-speed, thin-wall molding developed by Engel Maschinenbau in Austria and soon to be introduced at the K 2001 show in Dusseldorf this fall. Engel (parent of Engel Canada Ltd., Guelph, Ont.) has received preliminary patent approval on what it calls the X-Melt process, a method of using energy stored in the melt to fill the melt without even moving the injection ram.

Fast fill made simpler

Engel came up with the X-Melt approach by accident. Its engineers were contemplating the trend among machine builders to use gas accumulators or electric servo drives A servo drive is a special electric amplifier used to power electric servo motors. It monitors feedback signals from the motor and continually adjusts for deviation from expected behavior.  to achieve ever faster injection rates of 1000, 1500, or even 2000 mm/sec. Engel's staff pondered the difficult task of overcoming the inertia of the screw twice--first to achieve almost instantaneous acceleration and then to stop it "on a dime" at the boost/hold switchover switch·o·ver  
n.
A complete shift, as from one system to another.
 point.

The researchers experimented with a mold that was specially equipped with sensors to detect the melt-front position during injection. What they found was that high screw-advance speed of 1000 mm/sec or more required a large amount of energy but produced melt-front speeds that were only one-tenth as fast as the screw movement. The dynamic energy was temporarily absorbed through compression of the melt under high injection pressure. In some high-speed experiments, the screw completed its travel before the melt barely moved.

Engel concluded that high screw-advance speed was unnecessary if the goal was to achieve high melt-front speed. If the mold were equipped with a shutoff shut·off  
n.
1. A device that shuts something off.

2. A stoppage; a cessation.
 nozzle An orifice in an inkjet print head through which ink is sprayed onto the paper. Print heads with six thousand or more nozzles are common in today's printers.
Nozzle 
 able to withstand high pressure (14,000 to 29,000 psi or more), then it would be possible to precompress the melt with the valve closed by moving the screw to its final injection position. Once the valve is opened, the melt would expand into the mold all by itself, releasing the stored energy.

That is the essence of X-Melt. It reportedly uses only one-third to half as much energy to fill the mold. It simplifies the process by eliminating the need to determine the right injection-speed and holding-pressure profiles. (The screw does not advance beyond the precompression position.) The X-Melt technique does require some trial and error to determine the optimum screw precompression position, which depends upon pressure-volume-temperature (pvT) relationships for a particular resin. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 George Steinbichler, director of research and process technology, amorphous Unorganized or vague. A lack of structure. For example, the amorphous state of a spot on a rewritable optical disc means that the laser beam will not be reflected from it, which is in contrast to a crystalline state which will reflect light. See crystalline.  resins are compressible com·press·i·ble  
adj.
That can be compressed: compressible packing materials; a compressible box.



com·press
 by around 10% and crystalline Like a crystal. It implies a uniform structure of molecules in all dimensions. For example, phase change technology, widely used for rewritable optical discs, uses crystalline spots (bits) to reflect the laser beam. Amorphous, non-crystalline bits do not reflect light.  resins by 30% over a pressure range of 14,000 psi.

Steinbichler notes that two requirements of the process--reaching precisely repeatable screw pre-compression position and holding it there after the nozzle valve opens--are more suited to the capabilities of newer all-electric machines than conventional hydraulic presses hydraulic press

Machine consisting of a cylinder fitted with a piston (see piston and cylinder) that uses liquid under pressure to exert a compressive force upon a stationary anvil or baseplate. The liquid is forced into the cylinder by a pump.
. Engel will demonstrate the X-Melt process on its new "e-motion" all-electric tiebarless presses, which will also be introduced at K 2001.

Matthew H. Naitove

Steinbichler notes that Engel and others have used a somewhat similar technique in the past that involved precompressing the melt by delaying the opening of valve gates while starting the forward injection movement of the screw. What is different about X-Melt is that the melt is pressurized pres·sur·ize  
tr.v. pres·sur·ized, pres·sur·iz·ing, pres·sur·iz·es
1. To maintain normal air pressure in (an enclosure, as an aircraft or submarine).

2.
 to a defined level, and the screw is held at a precise position during melt expansion. These require special software, for which Engel is seeking a patent.

Early trial results

Steinbichler says molding tests were performed with an ABS/PC battery box for a mobile phone (see photo). The four-cavity mold produced parts weighing 3.2 g each with wall thickness between 0.4 and 0.5 mm. After the melt was precompressed to 34,825 psi, the mold filled in 60 millisec, compared with 80 millisec using a conventional accumulator-equipped machine and an injection speed of 1000 mm/sec. In addition, variations in part weight with X-Melt were [+ or -]0.03%, less than half the [+ or -]0.07% achieved with accumulator injection.

In another demonstration, a PBT PBT Provider Backbone Transport (networking technology adding determinism to ethernet)
PBT Polybutylene Terephthalate
PBT Profit Before Tax
PBT Paper Based Test (education) 
 keypad A small keyboard or supplementary keyboard keys; for example, the keys on a calculator or the number/cursor cluster on a computer keyboard. See programmable keypad.  frame for a calculator was molded in two cavities. Each part weighed 8-9 g and measured about 79 x 63 mm x 0.8 mm thick. After pre-compression to between 29,000 and 36,000 psi using a special needle shutoff nozzle, the parts filled in 40-50 millisec through a submarine gate.

Good for small parts

"Today, the X-Melt process makes sense for parts weighing up to 50 g," Steinbichler says. He cites micro-precision parts like electronic connectors as one likely application. For multi-cavity molds, he recommends precompressing the melt as close as possible to the cavities to avoid pressure losses in the runners. For that reason, he recommends using a hot-runner valve-gate system specially engineered for high pressures. Engel is working with Mold-Masters Ltd. of Georgetown, Ont., to develop such a system.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Engel Maschinenbau develops X-Melt process
Comment:High-Speed, Thin- Wall Molding Doesn't Need an Accumulator.(Engel Maschinenbau develops X-Melt process)
Author:Naitove, Matthew H.
Publication:Plastics Technology
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUAU
Date:Aug 1, 2001
Words:802
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