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Polymer Engineering and Science, Vol.42, No.12, 2471-2481, 2002
Development of rapid heating and cooling systems for injection molding applications
The injection molding process has several inherent problems associated with the constant temperature mold. A basic solution is the rapid thermal response molding process that facilitates rapid temperature change at the mold surface thereby improving quality of molded parts without increasing cycle time. Rapid heating and cooling systems consisting of one metallic heating layer and one oxide insulation layer were investigated in this paper. Design issues towards developing a mold capable of raising temperature from 25degreesC to 250degreesC in 2 seconds and cooling to 50degreesC within 10 seconds were discussed. To reduce thermal stresses in the layers during heating and cooling, materials with closely matched low thermal expansion coefficient were used for both layers. Effects of various design parameters, such as layer thickness, power density and material properties, on the performance of the insert were studied in detail with the aid of heat transfer simulation and thermal stress simulation. Several rapid thermal response mold inserts were constructed on the basis of the simulation results. The experimental heating and cooling response agrees with the simulation and also satisfies the target heating and cooling requirement.