Modified on
04 Aug 2022 07:55 pm
Skill-Lync
Making injection molded prototypes requires high levels of technical expertise and attention to detail. This is to prevent small mistakes from costing companies big money when it comes to mass-production of parts that are being manufactured.
In order to prevent such circumstances, we need to be equipped with a highly intelligent design. This article discusses some of the molding defects that can occur in parts during injection molding, and ways to fix and avoid them.
Flow lines can be defined as linear grooving, or circular ripples, on the surface of molded parts that indicate the direction of material flow within the mould cavity. Injection molded plastic begins its journey through the part tooling via an entry section called a “gate.” It then flows through the tool cavity and eventually hardens into a solid.
Causes of Injection Molding Defects
Remedies of Injection Molding Defects
Injection Molding Defects in Detail
Below are the common injection molding defects:
Sink marks are unwanted shallow depressions on the molded plastic surface caused by localized shrinkage during the hardening process of injection molding. Sink marks on the exterior impair the aesthetic quality of the hardening process. In the plastic part design practice, engineers often check the thickness distribution to predict potential sink marks. This difference in the shrinkage amount is the main cause of the sink mark.
Causes:
Sink marks are often caused when the cooling time or the cooling mechanism is insufficient for the plastic to fully cool and cure while in the mold. They can also be caused by inadequate pressure in the cavity or by an excessive temperature at the gate. Thick sections of the injection molded part take longer to cool than thin ones and so are more likely to be where sink marks are located.
Remedies:
Delamination, sometimes referred to as lamination or layering, is a defect in which the surface of a molded part can be peeled off layer by layer.
Causes
Remedies
Warpage is an excessive shape change of the part after it has been ejected from the injection mould. Also known as deformation, a warped part will twist or bend due to internal stresses in the part caused by uneven shrinkage rates or by some mechanically applied forces such as during the ejection phase. Eliminating part warp can have huge cost savings and should be part of a lean manufacturing program.
Causes:
Warping is usually caused by non-uniform cooling of the mold material. Different cooling rates in different parts of the mold cause the plastic to cool differently and thus create internal stresses. These stresses, when released, lead to warping.
Remedies:
Note: Semi-crystalline materials have a highly ordered molecular structure with sharp melt points. They do not gradually soften with a temperature increase, instead, semi-crystalline materials remain solid until a given quantity of heat is absorbed and then rapidly change into a low viscosity liquid.
Burn marks are small, dark or black spots that appear near the end of the flow path of a molded part or in the blind area where the air trap forms.
Causes:
Burn marks are caused either by the degradation of the plastic material due to excessive heating or by injection speeds that are too fast. Burn marks can also be caused by the overheating of trapped air, which etches the surface of the molded part.
Remedies:
Usually, the molten resin flows in the form of a jet stream. However, when flowing from a narrow area to a wide space, if too fast, it sometimes flies out in strips, and flows without contacting the mold. This is referred to as jetting. Depending on the appearance of the jetting on the surface of a finished product, some are banded and some are misty, but the reasons are the same.
Causes
1) The gate is small
2) Injection speed is fast
3) High viscosity / low fluidity
The conditions causing the increase in viscosity are as follows:
To a certain extent, the holding pressure makes jetting less apparent. On the contrary, if the applied holding pressure is not high enough, jetting becomes more obvious.
Remedies
Weld lines occur in plastic injection molded parts in the area or plane where two or more streams of material fuse together as the mold cavity fills with material. It is common knowledge that weld lines create weak areas in molded parts. Weld lines are not caused by any deficiencies in material, machine, mold or process and are difficult to eliminate. Weld lines are inherent in the design of the component itself although they can be mitigated with proper part design, material selections and processing considerations.
Causes
Weld lines are caused by the inadequate bonding of two or more flow fronts when there is partial solidification of the molten plastic.
Remedies:
Weld lines are inherent in the design of the component itself although they can be mitigated with the following factors:
Flash is a defect where excessive material is found at locations where the mold separates, notably the parting surface, movable core, vents, or venting ejector pins.
Causes:
Low clamp force -
Gap within the mold -
Molding conditions -
Improper venting -
Remedies:
A short shot is a molded part that is incomplete because insufficient material was injected into the mold. In some cases, short shots are intentionally produced to determine or visualize the filling pattern. But problematic short shots occur when the polymer melt cannot fill the entire cavity (or cavities)-most commonly at thin sections or extremities.
Causes
Any factors that increase the resistance of polymer melt to flow or prohibit delivery of sufficient material into the cavity can cause a short shot. These factors include:
Remedies
When molten plastic is injected into a mold, its performance is affected by four major forces: the pressure pushing it, the temperature it’s at, how well it flows at that temperature, and how quickly it will change temperature (i.e. cooling rate). When these conditions are not optimal, it can cause voids and sinks.
Causes
Remedies
While the root cause is related to the injection mold defect of short shots, in that defect the issue is focused on flow and mechanisms of the mold that interferes with that.
Author
Navin Baskar
Author
Skill-Lync
Subscribe to Our Free Newsletter
Continue Reading
Related Blogs
Learn how to render a shock-tube-simulation and how to work on similar projects after enrolling into anyone of Skill-Lync's CAE courses.
10 May 2020
In this blog, read how to design the frontal BIW enclosure of a car (Bonnet) and learn how Skill-Lync Master's Program in Automotive Design using CATIA V5 will help you get employed as a design engineer.
10 May 2020
Tetrahedral is a four- nodded solid element that can be generated through the tria element by creating a volume and also through the existing volume of the geometry. These elements are used where the geometry has high thickness and complexity. The image attached below is a representation of a Tetra element. The Tetra element will have 4 triangular faces with four nodes joining them together
02 Aug 2022
A connector is a mechanism that specifies how an object (vertex, edge, or face) is connected to another object or the ground. By often simulating the desired behaviour without having to build the precise shape or specify contact circumstances, connectors make modeling simpler.
03 Aug 2022
One of the most crucial processes in carrying out an accurate simulation using FEA is meshing. A mesh is composed of elements that have nodes—coordinate positions in space that might change depending on the element type—that symbolise the geometry's shape.
04 Aug 2022
Author
Skill-Lync
Subscribe to Our Free Newsletter
Continue Reading
Related Blogs
Learn how to render a shock-tube-simulation and how to work on similar projects after enrolling into anyone of Skill-Lync's CAE courses.
10 May 2020
In this blog, read how to design the frontal BIW enclosure of a car (Bonnet) and learn how Skill-Lync Master's Program in Automotive Design using CATIA V5 will help you get employed as a design engineer.
10 May 2020
Tetrahedral is a four- nodded solid element that can be generated through the tria element by creating a volume and also through the existing volume of the geometry. These elements are used where the geometry has high thickness and complexity. The image attached below is a representation of a Tetra element. The Tetra element will have 4 triangular faces with four nodes joining them together
02 Aug 2022
A connector is a mechanism that specifies how an object (vertex, edge, or face) is connected to another object or the ground. By often simulating the desired behaviour without having to build the precise shape or specify contact circumstances, connectors make modeling simpler.
03 Aug 2022
One of the most crucial processes in carrying out an accurate simulation using FEA is meshing. A mesh is composed of elements that have nodes—coordinate positions in space that might change depending on the element type—that symbolise the geometry's shape.
04 Aug 2022
Related Courses