Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol.99, No.5, 2603-2613, 2006
Assessing the effect of processing variables on the mechanical response of polysytrene molded using vibration-assisted injection molding process
The present work is focused on the study of vibration-assisted injection molding (VAIM) process, using polystyrene as a model polymeric system. This recently developed polymer processing operation is based on the concept of using motion of the injection screw to apply mechanical vibration to polymer melt during the injection and packing stages of injection molding process, to control the polymer behavior at a molecular level, which would result in improvements/alterations to the mechanical behavior of molded products. In this study, the afore-mentioned concept was verified experimentally from monotonic tensile experiments and birefringence measurements of VAIM molded polystyrene in comparison with those of conventional injection molding process. The results of our study indicate that the actual degree of strength improvement depends on at least four parameters, namely, vibration frequency, vibration amplitude, vibration duration, and the delay time between the injection start and the vibration start. Furthermore, when these parameters were optimized, as much as a 28% strength improvement was observed, accompanied by an increase in toughness. Furthermore, birefringence measurements revealed that VAIM processing significantly altered the residual stress distribution throughout final products, but it did not, however, change the material density in the products. (c) 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:injection molding;vibration-assisted injection molding;orientation;polystyrene;mechanical properties;melt manipulation