Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,799,752 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

New Runner - Design Concept Boosts Quality & Productivity.


Why 'naturally balanced' multi-cavity molds sometimes refuse to fill evenly is a mystery that eluded solution--until now. A simple concept called the MeltFlipper allows molders to increase cavitation cavitation

Formation of vapour bubbles within a liquid at low-pressure regions that occur in places where the liquid has been accelerated to high velocities, as in the operation of centrifugal pumps, water turbines, and marine propellers.
 and maximize output of quality parts.

Nowadays, injection molders are under increasing pressure (pun pun, use of words, usually humorous, based on (a) the several meanings of one word, (b) a similarity of meaning between words that are pronounced the same, or (c) the difference in meanings between two words pronounced the same and spelled somewhat similarly, e.g.  intended). Demands for tight tolerances, near-zero rejects, and ever-lower cost that were once limited to automotive and medical jobs are now common even for molders of consumer products. Molders have often responded by limiting themselves to molds of low cavitation because they are easiest to balance naturally. But low cavitation requires more molds, more machines, more floor space for the machines, and more people to run them. To remain competitive in a global marketplace, cost can only be reduced by producing parts faster with more consistency and less scrap. If higher-quality parts can be produced from an eight-cavity mold rather than a four-cavity tool, or from 16 cavities instead of eight, cost savings and greater customer satisfaction will follow. The question is how to get there.

The basis of the solution came to me in 1997 when I was wrestling with the issue of mold-filling imbalance. For years, I had observed imbalances in what have always been called "naturally balanced" runners. A member of my computer-aided-engineering consortium at Penn State Erie was encountering just such a problem. His eight-cavity mold was "naturally balanced," and yet the parts from the mold's inner cavities were consistently heavier than those made in cavities farther from the sprue sprue, chronic disorder of the small intestine caused by impaired absorption of fat and other nutrients. Two forms of the disease exist. Tropical sprue occurs in central and northern South America, Asia, Africa, and other specific locations. . Tight weight tolerances for this part didn't allow for such variation, and at nearly $20/lb, material waste had to be held to a minimum.

I first blamed the two usual suspects: cooling variations created by higher thermal load of the plastic parts near the center of the mold, and plate deflection deflection /de·flec·tion/ (de-flek´shun) deviation or movement from a straight line or given course, such as from the baseline in electrocardiography.

de·flec·tion
n.
1.
 within the mold. These standard scapegoats had served industry well for years. But this mold had a well-designed cooling system cooling system: see air conditioning; internal-combustion engine; refrigeration.
cooling system

Apparatus used to keep the temperature of a structure or device from exceeding limits imposed by needs of safety and efficiency.
 that provided increased cooling to the inner cavities. One look at the mold's rigid support columns and the parts' thick walls told me plate deflection wasn't the problem either.

I started thinking about runner systems. I started thinking about the laws of physics and everything I knew about laminar flow laminar flow

Fluid flow in which the fluid travels smoothly or in regular paths. The velocity, pressure, and other flow properties at each point in the fluid remain constant.
. Then I started retracing the runner from the gate back down to its first branch.

The end of symmetry

Plastics exhibit a laminar laminar /lam·i·nar/ (lam´i-nar)
1. pertaining to a lamina or laminae.

2. laminated.

3. of, pertaining to, or being a streamlined, smooth fluid flow.
 (or streamline) flow through a runner, so the melt is divided into many concentric Coming from the center, or circles within circles. For example, tracks on a hard disk are concentric. Tracks on optical media are concentric or spiral shaped (in a coil) depending on the type.  layers or "laminates" that have different shear and temperature conditions. Regardless of flow rate, shear is greatest near the wall of a runner channel and lowest-or zero-at the center (see Fig. 1). Melt viscosity will be significantly lower in these highshear laminates than in the middle of the runner flow.

Additionally, high shear near the runner wall can create signfficant frictional heating in the outer laminates. Sophisticated 3D mold-filling simulations have shown these outer laminates to be as much as 100[degrees] C hotter than the laminates in the center of the runner channel. Laminar flow and the low rate of heat transfer between laminates maintain the distinct layered structure as the melt proceeds along the runner.

Highly sheared sheared  
adj.
Shaped or finished by shearing, especially cut or trimmed to a uniform length: a sheared fur coat.

Adj. 1.
, hotter, less viscous viscous /vis·cous/ (vis´kus) sticky or gummy; having a high degree of viscosity.

vis·cous
adj.
1. Having relatively high resistance to flow.

2. Viscid.
 material flows in an annular ring annular ring
n.
An opaque area appearing in radiographs of the lung and indicating a cavity of tuberculosis. Also called pleural ring.
 along the channel walls surrounding low-shear, cooler, more viscous laminates flowing in the center of the channel. Sometimes unusually low-shear conditions in a cold-runner mold can cause the outer laminates to be cooler than the inner laminates. But under any circumstances, there will be a difference in the melt's condition between these laminates.

Looked at in cross-section, the pattern of flow laminates across the runner is initially symmetrical. But when the flow splits at a branch, that symmetry is lost, and filling imbalance begins.

The computer doesn't lie

I asked Dr. Jack Young, a mechanical-engineering colleague at Penn State Erie, to help me make a computer analysis of an eight-cavity test mold I was having built. With assistance from a student researcher and Fluent Inc.'s FIDAP FIDAP Fluid Dynamics Analysis Package (Fluid Dynamics International, Inc.)  fluid-dynamics analysis software, we needed more than three months to develop the required model and complete an analysis.

We could have modeled a runner in five minutes using any of the commercial injection molding injection molding
n.
A manufacturing process for forming objects, as of plastic or metal, by heating the molding material to a fluid state and injecting it into a mold.
 software packages. But we needed to start from scratch to start (again) from the very beginning; also, to start without resources.
- Thackeray.

See also: Scratch
 in order to overcome the limitation of the one-dimensional solution techniques used for runner analysis in these programs. Without recognizing the shear-induced imbalance created in a branching runner, developers of injection molding simulation software Simulation software is based on the process of imitating a real phenomenon with a set of mathematical formulas. It is, essentially, a program that allows the user to observe an operation through simulation without actually running the program.  have used one-dimensional analysis to simplify modeling and provide faster calculations. This short cut cannot predict the asymmetrical a·sym·met·ri·cal or a·sym·met·ric
adj. Abbr. a
Lacking symmetry between two or more like parts; not symmetrical.
 conditions that develop in a branching runner. Though I am still a huge fan and user of injection molding simulation, I recognize the limitations of current programs in designing runners and am working with CAE (1) (Computer-Aided Engineering) Software that analyzes designs which have been created in the computer or that have been created elsewhere and entered into the computer.  providers to overcome this problem.

Our analysis was able to pick up the asymmetrical temperature distribution in the secondary runner (Fig. 2). However, the result was not what I expected: 70% of the flow was going to the inside cavities, and only 30% to the outside. I was sure this degree of imbalance was too large to be true.

When our test mold arrived, I found that the computer hadn't lied: In several tests with different resins and injection rates, the best balance we could produce was 65% of flow to the inside cavities and 35% to the outside. At worst, 95% of the material flowed into the innermost in·ner·most  
adj.
1. Situated or occurring farthest within: the innermost chamber.

2. Most intimate: one's innermost feelings.

n.
 cavities.

Can symmetry be restored?

Our computer simulation and test mold proved that the imbalance developed in the standard geometrically balanced runners resulted from the shear variations across the flow channel. The symmetrical nature of the flow--with hotter, highly sheared laminates near the outside wall and cooler, less-sheared laminates in the center--became asymmetrical when it split at a branch (Fig. 3).

After the branch, flow velocity In fluid dynamics the flow velocity, or velocity field, of a fluid is a vector field which is used to mathematically describe the motion of the fluid. Definition
The flow velocity of a fluid is a vector field

, shear rate Shear rate is a measure of the rate of shear deformation:



For the simple shear case, it is just a gradient of velocity in a flowing material.
, temperature, and viscosity across the branching runner were redistributed re·dis·trib·ute  
tr.v. re·dis·trib·ut·ed, re·dis·trib·ut·ing, re·dis·trib·utes
To distribute again in a different way; reallocate.

Adj. 1.
, with high-shear, hotter laminates following one side of a branching runner, and low-shear, cooler laminates concentrated on the other side.

In a typical eight-cavity, H-pattern mold, the flow will split again, with most of the high-shear, hotter, low-viscosity material flowing to one cavity on each tertiary runner section, which therefore fills first. We now refer to this as Flow #1, or the dominant flow. The cavities it fills will often flash while other cavities are still filling. Parts formed from these cavities will normally be heavier and larger than those from other cavities. Additionally, they will shrink and warp differently from other cavities, and will have different mechanical properties as well. In fact, shear effects on mold-filling imbalance may dwarf all previously suspected causes of product variations in multi-cavity molds.

Predicting which cavities will receive Flow #1 in a multi-cavity mold is as simple as following the outside edges of the runner system from sprue to cavity. Similar divisions occur in a single cavity with multiple gates (Fig. 4). Place a pencil against the side of the primary runner in a mold and drag the pencil along, continuing through all of the branches, until it gets to a cavity. This is the cavity that will be filled by Flow #1.

In a normal eight-cavity mold, two flows will result: Flow #1 develops from the high-shear material and Flow #2 from the low-shear material. In a 16-cavity mold there will normally be four flows; 32 cavities will result in eight flows; 64 will result in 16 flows, and so on. Each of these flows produces parts that are formed under different conditions.

In molds with four cavities (and sometimes with only two), the high-shear laminates will end up on opposite edges of parts formed in different cavities, potentially causing mirror-image warpage in the molded parts (Fig. 5). In standard four-cavity molds, adjacent cavities will be different from one another. In conventional sprue-fed, four-cavity molds, this will result in like parts being molded in cavities positioned diagonally to each other (Fig. 6A). In four-cavity, parting-line-injected molds with an in-line cavity arrangement, like parts will be molded in every other cavity (Fig. 6B). Again, one can use the technique of running a pencil along the edge of the primary runner to determine where Flow #1 will end up.

Face the facts

"But we don't have a filling imbalance." I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 how many times I have heard these words. My response is that nearly every mold using conventional geometrically balanced ("naturally balanced") runners and having two or more runner branches does indeed have a filling imbalance.

It's simple to prove: Walk into any plant running a mold with this type of runner, eliminate hold and pack pressure, and reduce the shot size until the best-filling cavities are about 70-80% full. The imbalance usually will be visually obvious. It can be quantified by weighing the parts formed from Flow #1 and comparing their weights to those of any of the other cavity groups.

Hot-runner suppliers have asserted that good mold balance can be demonstrated by comparing weights of fully packed parts. Yet even if the brute force (programming) brute force - A primitive programming style in which the programmer relies on the computer's processing power instead of using his own intelligence to simplify the problem, often ignoring problems of scale and applying naive methods suited to small problems directly  of the molding machine (Woodworking) A planing machine for making moldings
(Founding) A machine to assist in making molds for castings.

See also: Molding Molding
 equalizes the part weights to within a fraction of a gram, differences in filling and packing can still result in variable shrinkage Shrinkage

The amount by which inventory on hand is shorter than the amount of inventory recorded.

Notes:
The missing inventory could be due to theft, damage, or book keeping errors.
, warpage, and mechanical properties. Our short-shot test reveals imbalances that are masked but not eliminated in a fully packed shot.

Companies are so conditioned to believe the conventional wisdom about "naturally balanced" runners that they ignore the factor of runner design as a possible source of their filling problems or product variations. They will blame the mold builder, material supplier, equipment manufacturer, or the position of the stars before they question the runner.

For decades, so much money, time, and effort have been directed at improving product consistency through better plastic materials, SPC/SQC methods, finer control of injection molding machines Injection molding machine (also known as injection press) - a machine for making plastic parts. Manufacturing products by injection molding process. Consist of two main parts, an injection unit and a clamping unit. , and precision machining of injection molds. Yet none of these have any ability to influence the large variations that regularly occur between cavities within a single shot.

The shear-induced imbalance from a runner creates variations in shot size, fill rate, and fill pressure between cavities that can easily exceed 20%. In an eight-cavity mold, when the Flow #1 cavities fill, other cavities may be only 70-80% full. At the instant the Flow #1 cavities fill, injection rate in the later-filling cavities will double, and the melt pressure in Flow #1 cavities will instantly spike, while pressure at the flow front in the other cavities is still zero.

If variations of this magnitude were created by a molding machine, tooling, or resin material, they would be unacceptable and their supplier would be out of business. Yet injection molders live with these variations every day. I love microprocessor-based, multi-zone, living-color, fingertip-digital-input machine controllers as much as anyone. But they can't fix the flow imbalance or the resulting variations in molded parts.

The MeltFlipper is born

It turns out that it isn't necessary to eliminate the asymmetry Asymmetry

A lack of equivalence between two things, such as the unequal tax treatment of interest expense and dividend payments.
 developed at a runner branch--it only needs to be repositioned. Picture a runner that branches horizontally from side to side. The melt therefore divides along a vertical axis at the branch. If, subsequently, the melt in each branch could somehow be rotated or flipped so that its symmetry was no longer top to bottom, but side-to-side, at the next split the flow fed to each cavity would be of equal temperature, pressure, and viscosity. This would be the true "naturally balanced" runner system that the industry always thought it was working with.

One method to reorient Re`o´ri`ent   

a. 1. Rising again.
The life reorient out of dust.
- Tennyson.

Verb 1.
 the melt is to add an elevation change within the runner that causes the melt to literally "flip," hence the name MeltFlipper. It counteracts the asymmetrical, side-to-side variation of flow laminates occurring at runner branches, thus ensuring that each mold cavity receives an equal proportion of the varied melt conditions, and that cavities fill at approximately the same time. Located at the intersection of branching runner sections in a standard H-pattern runner, the MeltFlipper repositions the side-to-side flow variations by rotating the melt circumferentially Cir`cum`fer`en´tial`ly

adv. 1. So as to surround or encircle.
 about 90[degrees] at the first branch (Fig. 7).

Instead of allowing the hotter, more shear-thinned laminates in the primary runner to follow the inside wall of the secondary runner, the MeltFlipper diverts these laminates to the bottom of the secondary runner. The cooler, more viscous laminates from the center of the flow, which normally transfer to the opposite surface of the secondary runner, are repositioned to the top of the secondary runner.

When the melt splits again at the tertiary runner, the laminates entering the runner branches will be proportionally the same, with equal amounts of high-shear and low-shear laminates. Flow to all the mold cavities will be balanced. For molds where there are three or more runner branches, as in the case of standard 16- or 32-cavity layouts, the MeltFlipper can be applied to the intersection of primary and secondary runners to achieve the desired melt positioning at the next branch, and again at the intersection of tertiary and quaternary quaternary /qua·ter·nary/ (kwah´ter-nar?e)
1. fourth in order.

2. containing four elements or groups.


qua·ter·nar·y
adj.
1. Consisting of four; in fours.
 runners, and so forth.

The tip of the iceberg tip of the iceberg
n. pl. tips of the iceberg
A small evident part or aspect of something largely hidden: afraid that these few reported cases of the disease might only be the tip of the iceberg. 
 

With this new understanding of shear-induced imbalances in runners, a gremlin gremlin, in American folklore, malicious, airborne supernatural being. Gremlins were first heard of during World War II as creatures responsible for unexplainable mechanical failures and disruptions in aircraft.  that has haunted us for years has been unveiled, as have significant new opportunities. Over the five-plus years that I have focused on this issue, I have seen hundreds of applications that were once thought to be molded under ideal conditions and yet experienced problems caused by the old mold gremlin, filling imbalance. In addition to the production problems created by filling imbalances, we have found that there can be significant property variations between parts formed in the various cavity groups. By recognizing the various flows in a mold, one can more quickly separate product variations created by mold steel and process conditions from those caused by runner imbalance. The resulting faster commissioning of new molds can pay for the MeltFlipper even before production starts.

The biggest advantage of the MeltFlipper is that molders can potentially double or quadruple quad·ru·ple  
adj.
1. Consisting of four parts or members.

2. Four times as much in size, strength, number, or amount.

3. Music Having four beats to the measure.

n.
 production using higher cavitation molds while maintaining cavity-to-cavity consistency. The MeltFlipper resolves typical problems resulting from flow imbalances, including inconsistent packing, part weight, and size; warpage; increased clamp clamp (klamp) a surgical device for compressing a part or structure.

rubber dam clamp  a metallic device used to retain the dam on a tooth.


clamp
n.
 tonnage TONNAGE, mar. law. The capacity of a ship or vessel.
     2. The act of congress of March 2, 1799, s. 64, 1 Story's L. U. S. 630, directs that to ascertain the tonnage of any ship or vessel, the surveyor, &c.
; flash; short shots; and even material degradation with sensitive resins like PVC PVC: see polyvinyl chloride.
PVC
 in full polyvinyl chloride

Synthetic resin, an organic polymer made by treating vinyl chloride monomers with a peroxide.
. The MeltFlipper also offers potential for controlling part warpage and the distribution of gas in gas-assist molding.

The MeltFlipper can be adapted to nearly any runner profile and imposes virtually no restrictions on flow. Because it can be accommodated in an insert as small as 15 mm diam., the MeltFlipper readily retrofits to existing molds (Fig. 9). Finally, the technology is very tolerant of process variations and can be applied to hot-runner, cold-runner, and stack molds.

Though most of our experience with the MeltFlipper is in cold runner molds, the same technology works with hot runners A hot runner is an injection mold component containing a series of channels that distributes molten plastic within a mold to increase molding productivity through reduced waste, as the runners arent wasted each cycle by being ejected, as the plasic stays molten and gets used on the . Of particular interest is a new design variant we developed specifically for stack molds that are fed with hot runners. In stack molds, the cavities along the parting plane nearest the injection unit normally fill first. The stack mold requires a new runner design that can balance filling not only along a single plane, as with conventional hot-runner molds, but between the multiple parting planes.

New kind of flow analysis

Our major challenge in applying the MeltFlipper technology has been the lack of a user-friendly, "true 3D" flow analysis for runners. Hot-runner systems are complicated to experiment with, expensive, and not easily adjusted if a desired balance is not achieved. These systems require a well-developed 3D flow analysis for effective runner design. Not finding what we needed in the marketplace, we are developing our own with funding from the State of Pennsylvania's Ben Franklin Technology Program.

The new product, RunnerFlow 3D, uses optimized 3D filling analysis to provide the means to automatically design the required MeltFlipper features for a particular mold. Rather than simply outputting flow-analysis results, the new program is being developed to provide actual designs of the runner incorporating the MeltFlipper features, along with guidelines regarding its application. We plan to make this software available via the Internet to licensees of MeltFlipper technology. The program will use simple templates that will eliminate the need for sophisticated modeling and meshing by the user.

Success at Avaya

Lucent Technologies (now called Avaya, Inc.) was one of the first national corporations to see the Melt-Flipper's potential for making high cavitation the rule, rather than the exception. Jay Van Roy, a process engineer in Avaya's facility in Omaha, Neb., first became intrigued by the MeltFlipper from a research paper I presented at an SPEANTEC meeting in 1998. He decided to put the MeltFlipper to the test.

"I had a new tool coming out that I would have typically built as an eight-cavity mold," Jay told me recently. "I wanted to test it with 16 cavities, using the MeltFlipper to prove to myself that the claims made for it were true. I'm always looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 ways to increase the process window, decrease set-up time, and improve quality."

Jay admitted he was skeptical at first, particularly because the part he tested weighed only 0.13 g and had an intricate geometry and thin walls. The test mold was a naturally balanced "H" pattern, and the material was a PC/ABS PC/ABS Polycarbonate/Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene  blend. "Naturally balanced, the variation in part weight was 31%," Jay said. "With the MeltFlipper, the variation decreased to 4%, and I attribute most of that to steel variation in the mold (Fig. 10). We monitored cavity pressure in the mold, and it was more consistent with the MeltFlipper, too."

Avaya has since purchased a corporate license to use MeltFlipper technology on multiple molds. Jay says, "The big thing for us is the cost savings. When I can go from eight to 16 cavities, the cost is cut pretty close to half because I'm making one less mold and using one less machine."

Other national companies using MeltFlipper technology include Osram Sylvania It has been suggested that and be merged into this article or section. ()

OSRAM SYLVANIA INC.
, Lear Corp., Nypro, Lord Corp., Emerson, Summit Polymers, 3M, Loranger Mfg., and General Motor's Packard Electric Div.

John Beaumont John Beaumont can refer to several people:
  • John Beaumont, 4th Baron Beaumont (1361–1396)
  • John Beaumont (poet) (1583–1627), English poet
  • John Beaumont (MP) (c.
, president and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of Beaumont Runner Technologies, Inc. in Erie, Pa., is also an associate professor of plastics engineering at Penn State Erie. He is a co-founder of the university's Plastics Technology Deployment Center and founder of its Computer Aided Engineering (application) Computer Aided Engineering - (CAE) Use of computers to help with all phases of engineering design work. Like computer aided design, but also involving the conceptual and analytical design steps.  Consortium.

About Patents & Licensing

Because the MeltFlipper is not a widget Pronounced "wih-jit," for decades, the term has been a popular word for a generic "thing" when there is no real name for it. It is often used to describe examples of made-up products along with other fictitious names; for example, "10 widgets, 5 frabbits and 2 dingits. , but a technology that is applied uniquely to each mold, it is not sold as a product, but licensed, much like computer software. A low-cost, fixed-rate license can be purchased for individual molds, for a volume of molds, or on a company-wide annual or lifetime basis. The license comes with a guarantee that the customer is entitled to a complete refund (or a credit applied to another mold) if not completely satisfied with the results of MeltFlipper technology. After two years, I have not had to return a nickel.

The MeltFlipper technology is patented in the U.S. and patents are pending overseas. Our major concern is that despite the unconditional guarantee that comes with the license, a company will attempt to evaluate the MeltFlipper concept on its own and design it incorrectly. At first glance, the MeltFlipper seems elementary. However, there are subtle design issues that significantly affect its performance. These include where the MeltFlipper is used through progressive branches in a runner; the degree of elevation changes that are used in some designs; how the latter are changed through progressive branches; the direction of elevation changes; the effect of the sprue on rotation; and so forth.

My concern is that if a company applies the technology incorrectly, without our engineering support, it often wont work. Not only will this cause the company to misjudge mis·judge  
v. mis·judged, mis·judg·ing, mis·judg·es

v.tr.
To judge wrongly.

v.intr.
To be wrong in judging.
 the technology, but its unsuccessful experience may corrupt the reputation of the technology.
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.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:MeltFlipper
Comment:New Runner - Design Concept Boosts Quality & Productivity.(MeltFlipper)
Author:Beaumont, John
Publication:Plastics Technology
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2001
Words:3276
Previous Article:Micromolding Sizing Up the Challenges.(plastics molding machinery)
Next Article:Ashland Buys Neste Polyester.(Ashland Inc. to acquire Neste Polyester)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Other parts handling equipment: product lines reviewed. (1991-1992 Manufacturing Handbook and Buyers' Guide)
Quality, versatility, productivity. (includes related article on production machinery) (Cover Story)
Other parts-handling equipment. (plastics machinery) (Manufacturing Handbook & Buyers' Guide 1994/95) (Directory)
Getting Answers the Old-Fashioned Way.(Brief Article)
Stack moldes take on new tasks.
Hot-runner & stack molds get better cavity filling. (Keeping Up With Injection Molding).(Brief Article)
New melt-flow balancing for stack molds.(Injection Molding)
What to do when the mold just won't fill right.(Injection Molding)
Melt management technology used in golf ball manufacturing.(Equipment)
Get control of flow in the mold: a novel technology allows injection molders to alter the flow pattern inside the cavity and balance the filling of...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles