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Experimental determination of friction coefficients between thermoplastics and rapid tooled injection mold materials

Mary E. Kinsella (Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Ohio, USA)
Blaine Lilly (Industrial and Systems Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA)
Benjamin E. Gardner (Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Ohio, USA)
Nick J. Jacobs (University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio, USA)

Rapid Prototyping Journal

ISSN: 1355-2546

Article publication date: 1 July 2005

2444

Abstract

Purpose

To determine static friction coefficients between rapid tooled materials and thermoplastic materials to better understand ejection force requirements for the injection molding process using rapid‐tooled mold inserts.

Design/methodology/approach

Static coefficients of friction were determined for semi‐crystalline high‐density polyethylene (HDPE) and amorphous high‐impact polystyrene (HIPS) against two rapid tooling materials, sintered steel with bronze (LaserForm ST‐100) and stereolithography resin (SL5170), and against P‐20 mold steel. Friction tests, using the ASTM D 1894 standard, were run for all material pairs at room temperature, at typical part ejection temperatures, and at ejection temperatures preceded by processing temperatures. The tests at high temperature were designed to simulate injection molding process conditions.

Findings

The friction coefficients for HDPE were similar on P‐20 Steel, LaserForm ST‐100, and SL5170 Resin at all temperature conditions. The HIPS coefficients, however, varied significantly among tooling materials in heated tests. Both polymers showed highest coefficients on SL5170 Resin at all temperature conditions. Friction coefficients were especially high for HIPS on the SL5170 Resin tooling material.

Research limitations/implications

Applications of these findings must consider that elevated temperature tests more closely simulated the injection‐molding environment, but did not exactly duplicate it.

Practical implications

The data obtained from these tests allow for more accurate determination of friction conditions and ejection forces, which can improve future design of injection molds using rapid tooling technologies.

Originality/value

This work provides previously unavailable friction data for two common thermoplastics against two rapid tooling materials and one steel tooling material, and under conditions that more closely simulate the injection‐molding environment.

Keywords

Citation

Kinsella, M.E., Lilly, B., Gardner, B.E. and Jacobs, N.J. (2005), "Experimental determination of friction coefficients between thermoplastics and rapid tooled injection mold materials", Rapid Prototyping Journal, Vol. 11 No. 3, pp. 167-173. https://doi.org/10.1108/13552540510601291

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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