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Gas-assist injection molding is a process that utilizes an inert
gas (normally nitrogen) to create one or more hollow channels
within an injection-molded plastic part. At the end of the
filling stage, the gas (N2) is injected into the
still liquid core of the molding. From there, the gas follows
the path of the least resistance and replaces the thick molten
sections with gas-filled channels. Next, gas pressure packs the
plastic against the mold cavity surface, compensating for
volumetric shrinkage until the part solidifies. Finally, the gas
is vented to atmosphere or recycled. Gas-assist injection
molding has been around for well over two decades and many
people have had concerns over patent, rights and royalty fees.
Within the past few years, some of the original patents have
expired. And now, gas-assist injection molding is widely
practiced. Design engineers and processors alike are discovering
that this technology is an attractive option for certain
applications and offers many benefits. It is the responsibility
of the manufacturer to ascertain that their practice or
technology is not covered by current patents.
Variants of the Process
The main two applications of Gas Assisted Moulding are to
either inject the gas into the component cavity (internal gas
injection), or to use the gas on the outside surface, but still
within the mould cavity, to consolidate the component (external
gas injection).
Internal Gas Injection - Most widely used process
Benefits of Internal Gas Injection Moulding:
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Substantial cost reductions resulting from:
Reduction in molded plastic weights, and therefore cost of
material.
Reduction in molding time cycles, and therefore cost of
production.
Reduced in-mold pressures, and therefore less wear on molds.
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The use of the gas as a means of transmitting pressure
uniformly throughout the molding.
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Elimination of sink marks.
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Avoidance of plastic packing from the molding machine.
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Reduced in-mold pressures by up to 70%, and therefore
reduced press lock forces enabling larger moldings on
smaller machines.
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Reduced power consumption.
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Reduced molded in stress, and therfore improved dimensional
stability with no distortion.
External Gas Injection - used for enhanced surface definition
Benefits of External Gas Injection Moulding:
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Can eliminate sink marks.
- Virtually eliminates moulded-in stress and
therefore distortion.
- Improves dimensional stability.
- Applies pressure more efficiently, and
therefore less pressure is required:
- reducing lock forces or machine size.
- reducing wear on moulds.
- reducing power consumption.
- More design freedom:
- thicker ribs with reduced wall thicknesses.
- multi-rib components.
- flat PP and PE products.
A number of variants of gas use are incorporated into the
Internal gas injection process:
- Full Shot Internal Gas Assisted Moulding
- Short Shot Internal Gas Assisted Moulding
- Plastic Expulsion Process ∦ PEP
- Moving Core Gas Assisted Moulding
- Gas Cool for Internal and External Gas Moulding
Each variant has its uses and benefits.
Why Gas Injection Moulding?
Techniques have been developed whereby inert gas nitrogen is
injected into the still molten plastic in the mould cavity.
Acting from within the component shape, the gas inflates the
component and counteracts the effects of the material shrinkage.
The effect is to keep an internal pressure on the material until
it solidifies and skins at the mould cavity surface. This is
independent of any gate freezing.
Raw Materials
Most thermoplastics can benefit from the use of gas assisted
moulding including Polypropylene (PP), ABS, HIPS, Polycarbonate
(PC), PPC and Nylon (including glass filled grades).
Tooling
Machined steel. Must be specially designed with mold flow
analysis to enhance the hollowing-out of thick areas
Cost
Tooling costs are generally high. Part prices generally higher
than with injection molding.
Advantages
- Material savings (weight, cost) for thick-walled parts up
to 40%
The combined benefits of not packing a moulding are less
material is used. By not having to pack the material, and in
thicker components the resultant hollow core, can save as much
as up to 40% on the material used.
- Reduced Cycle times by 50% or more when compared to
standard injection molding of thick-walled parts
Another major benefit is the reduction in machine cycle times
that can be achieved. With no molten core to solidify, the
material in the mould cavity solidifies quicker thus enabling
the component to be ejected sooner.
- Smooth surface in comparison with structural foam
External gas injection provides an enhanced surface
definition of the component.
- Lower clamp forces
- Improved holding pressure effect
- High flexural stiffness and torsional rigidity
- Low internal stress level and low warpage for thick and
thin wall combinations (uniform shrinkage and pressure)
- Reduction of sink marks
- Design freedom
- Fewer weld lines due to fewer injection points
- Longer flow lengths or lower number of injection points
required for large thin-walled molded parts because gas
channels act as flow leaders
Disadvantages
Special care
must be taken in designing parts. High cost of tooling and mold
flow analysis.
Applications
Most plastic injection moulded components can benefit from the
use of gas assisted moulding. Applications from consumer goods
to automotive parts benefit from the process. The typical are:
Toys, auto parts & anything with thick areas. External
Gas Assisted Moulding Applications:
- Flat panels for office equipment.
- Computer enclosures.
- Furniture, i.e. tabletops.
- Automotive panels.
- Domestic appliances - e.g. fridges.
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