Gas assisted injection moulding: experiment and simulation.
Abstract
The gas assisted injection moulding process is an important extension to conventional injection moulding. Gas assist can be applied in a number of ways, but here the penetration of a gas bubble through the polymer melt is of interest. A 3D finite element implementation of a pseudo concentration method is employed to stimulate the primary penetration of the gas bubble. The wall thickness prediction is an important result since the extent of bubble penetration is sensitive to the remaining melt fraction. A number of methods for experimental measurement are developed to measure characteristics of the gas assisted injection moulding process dynamics and product. Key process variables, on an industrial gas-assist machine, were measured and analysed, leading to an empirical model for wall thickness prediction. Gas delay time and injection velocity are shown to be most influential in controlling residual wall thickness. Simulation results are evaluated against the empirical model. The trends observed, for simulation and experiment, in wall thickness after changes in process variable settings are found to agree qualitatively. The wall thickness prediction is found to be within 10% of the experimentally obtained measurements.
Subject Area
Materials science
Recommended Citation
L Mulvaney-Johnson,
"Gas assisted injection moulding: experiment and simulation."
(2001).
ETD Collection for Tennessee State University.
Paper AAIU160919.
https://digitalscholarship.tnstate.edu/dissertations/AAIU160919