Injection Compression Molding
Injection compression molding uses both types of molding to make a product. The set-up may contain a rotating element, with a first mold and a second mold set opposite to one another; a first counte-rmold and a second counter-mold. Injection molding fills the cavities and compression molding joins the separate parts. (Rossanese and Girelli, US Patent 7,534,102; 5/19/2009)
Recent Journal Articles
10/29/2010
Investigation of fiber orientation states in injection-compression molded short-fiber-reinforced thermoplastics
(pages 1899–1908)Polymer Composites 31 #11 (2010)
Yang, Huang and Li of South China University of Technology, China showed that injection-compression molding tends to form a five-layer structure of fiber orientation across the thickness. This is quite different from the fiber orientation patterns in compression-injection molding. The fibers orient orderly along the flow direction in the shell region, whereas most fibers arrange randomly in the skin and the core regions. Additionally, the fiber orientation changes in the width direction, with most fibers arranging orderly along the flow direction at positions near the mold cavity wall. The results also show that the compression force, compression distance, and compression speed play important roles in determining the fiber states. Thicker shell regions, in which most fibers orient remarkably along the flow direction, can be obtained under larger compression force or compression speed. Moreover, the delay time has an obvious effect on the fiber orientation at positions far from the gate. However, the effect of compression time is found to be negligible. (RDC 12/14/2010)
