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There are many details to pay attention in
injection molding which affects the physical properties, they
may even cause to the failure of the molding.
Jetting occurs when polymer melt is pushed at
a high velocity through restrictive areas, such as the nozzle,
runner, or gate, into open, thicker areas, without forming
contact with the mold wall. This leads to part weakness, surface
blemishes, and a multiplicity of internal defects.
An air trap is air that is caught inside the
mold cavity. It becomes trapped by converging polymer melt
fronts or because it failed to escape from the mold vents, or
mold inserts, which also act as vents.
A short shot is a molded part that is
incomplete because insufficient material was injected into the
mold. It can be caused by entrapped air, insufficient machine
injection pressure (resulting from high melt resistance and a
restricted flow path), pre-mature solidification of the polymer
melt, and machine defects.
A sink mark is a local surface depression and
a void is a vacuum bubble in the core. Sink marks and voids are
caused by localized shrinkage of the material at thick sections
without sufficient compensation when the part is cooling.
A weld line (also called a weld mark or a
knit line) is formed when separate melt fronts traveling in
opposite directions meet. The formation of weld lines can be
caused by holes or inserts in the part, multi-gate cavity
systems, or variable wall thickness where hesitation or race
tracking occurs. The weld lines are undesirable when the
strength and the surface quality are important. |