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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Investigation of the influence of vacuum venting on mould surface temperature in micro injection moulding

Sorgato, M., Babenko, Maksims, Lucchetta, G., Whiteside, Benjamin R. 26 April 2016 (has links)
Yes / The application of vacuum venting for the removal of air from mould cavity has been introduced in injection moulding with the intent to enhance micro/nano features replication and definition. The technique is adopted to remove air pockets trapped in the micro-features, which are out of reach for conventional venting technologies and can create considerable resistance to the melt filling flow. Nonetheless, several studies have revealed a negative effect on replication that could possibly arise from the application of vacuum venting. Although the incomplete filling of micro-scale features has often been attributed to poor venting, the limited research examining the application of vacuum venting has produced mixed results. In this work, the effect of air evacuation was experimentally investigated, monitoring mould and polymer temperature evolution during the micro injection moulding process by means of a high speed infrared camera and a sapphire window, which forms part of the mould wall. The results show that air evacuation removes a mould surface heating effect caused by rapid compression of the air ahead of the flow front and subsequent conduction of that heat into the mould surface. Hence, with the increase of the surface-to-volume ratio in micro-cavities, air evacuation has a detrimental effect on the cavity filling with polymers that are sensitive to changes of the mould temperature.
2

Structure and Property of Microinjection Molded Poly(lactic acid) with High Degree of Long Chain Branching

Zhao, Z.-G., Yang, Q., Coates, Philip D., Whiteside, Benjamin R., Kelly, Adrian L., Huang, Y.-J., Wu, P.-P. 27 July 2018 (has links)
Yes / Long chain branches (LCB) are successfully grafted to linear poly(lactic acid) (PLA) using functional group reactions with pentaerythritol triacrylate (PETA) and tetraethylthiuram disulfide (TETDS). Results show a high branching degree of PLA (∼49.5%) can be effectively obtained with adding only 1 wt % PETA, contributing remarkably to enhancing strain hardening. The density of the nuclei formed during nonisothermal crystallization for LCB-PLA samples is markedly increased contrasted with PLA, resulting in significantly enhancing crystallinity from 13.3% to 41%, the onset crystallization temperature (∼20 °C), and the crystallization rate. Interestingly, compared with mini-injection molding, the elevated wall shear rates (and corresponding shear stresses) prove to be beneficial to the creation of special crystalline morphologies (β-crystal form) and oriented structures under microinjection molding conditions, resulting in the improvement of tensile strength by ∼45 MPa. / Chinese Scholarship Council
3

Evaluation of heat transfer at the cavity-polymer interface in microinjection moulding based on experimental and simulation study

Babenko, Maksims, Sweeney, John, Petkov, P., Lacan, F., Bigot, S., Whiteside, Benjamin R. 08 November 2017 (has links)
Yes / In polymer melt processing, the heat transfer coefficient (HTC) determines the heat flux across the interface of the polymer melt and the mould wall. The HTC is a dominant parameter in cooling simulations especially for microinjection moulding, where the high surface to volume ratio of the part results in very rapid cooling. Moreover, the cooling rate can have a significant influence on internal structure, morphology and resulting physical properties. HTC values are therefore important and yet are not well quantified. To measure HTC in micromoulding, we have developed an experimental setup consisting of a special mould, and an ultra-high speed thermal camera in combination with a range of windows. The windows were laser machined on their inside surfaces to produce a range of surface topographies. Cooling curves were obtained for two materials at different processing conditions, the processing variables explored being melt and mould temperature, injection speed, packing pressure and surface topography. The finite element package Moldflow was used to simulate the experiments and to find the HTC values that best fitted the cooling curves, so that HTC is known as a function of the process variables explored. These results are presented and statistically analysed. An increase in HTC from the standard value of 2500 W/m2C to values in the region 7700 W/m2C was required to accurately model the observations. / EPSRC
4

Microinjection moulded polyetheretherketone biomaterials as spinal implants: physico-chemical and mechanical characterisation

Tuinea-Bobe, Cristina-Luminita, Xia, H., Ryabenkova, Yulia, Sweeney, John, Coates, Philip D., Fei, G. 04 December 2018 (has links)
Yes / Polyetheretherketone (or PEEK) is a thermoplastic polymer known for its high plasticity and toughness and has been widely employed as a material for a variety of load-bearing medical devices ranging from trauma implants to interspinal spacers and femoral stems. While being inherently chemically inert and therefore biocompatible and having very short lived post-radiation free radicals, PEEK presents different mechanical properties depending on its degree of crystallinity. It can be processed via extrusion, injection or compression moulding. However, these techniques do not allow high precision control over the fine morphological structure that strongly influences mechanical properties. Microinjection moulding, in contrast, makes it possible to produce fine details of medical implants with high precision and accuracy. Another advantage of this method is the controlled production of the material with heterogeneous structure due to variations in crystallinity. Having stiffness in the middle of the sample different from that at the edges enables a structure that mimics the bone/cartilage parts of an implant. This paper reports on the manufacturing of PEEK components by microinjection moulding, and their characterisation by physico-chemical (XRD, SAXS, TEM, FTIR, POM) and mechanical (tensile testing) means, in order to assess the suitability of use for biomedical application, such as spinal implants. We discuss the influence of such parameters as mould temperatures, injection speeds and hold pressures on the crystallinity and mechanical properties of the material. / Science Bridges: Bradford-China Programme for Pharmaceutical Sciences and Medical Technology, EP/G042365/1
5

A study of heat transfer at the cavity-polymer interface in microinjection moulding : the effects of processing conditions, cavity surface roughness and polymer physical properties on the heat transfer coefficient

Babenko, Maksims January 2015 (has links)
This thesis investigates the cooling behaviour of polymers during the microinjection moulding process. The work included bespoke experimental mould design and manufacturing, material characterisation, infra-red temperature measurements, cooling analysis and cooling prediction using commercial simulation software. To measure surface temperature of the polymers, compounding of polypropylene and polystyrene with carbon black masterbatch was performed to make materials opaque for the IR camera. The effects of addition of carbon black masterbatch were analysed using differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Sapphire windows formed part of the mould wall and allowed thermal measurements using an IR camera. They were laser machined on their inside surfaces to generate a range of finishes and structures. Their topographies were analysed using laser confocal microscope. The surface energy of sapphire windows was measured and compared to typical mould steel, employing a contact angle measurement technique and calculated using Owens-Wendt theory. A heating chamber was designed and manufactured to study spreading of polymer melts on sapphire and steel substrates. A design of experiments approach was taken to investigate the influence of surface finish and the main processing parameters on polymer cooling during microinjection moulding. Cooling curves were obtained over an area of 1.92 by 1.92 mm of the sapphire window. These experiments were conducted on the Battenfeld Microsystem 50 microinjection moulding machine. A simulation study of polymer cooling during the microinjection moulding process was performed using Moldflow software. Particular interest was paid to the effect of the values of the interfacial heat transfer coefficient (HTC) on the simulated cooling predictions. Predicted temperature curves were compared to experimentally obtained temperature distributions, to obtain HTC values valid for the material and processing parameters.
6

A Study of Heat Transfer at the Cavity-Polymer Interface in Microinjection Moulding. The effects of processing conditions, cavity surface roughness and polymer physical properties on the heat transfer coefficient

Babenko, Maksims January 2015 (has links)
This thesis investigates the cooling behaviour of polymers during the microinjection moulding process. The work included bespoke experimental mould design and manufacturing, material characterisation, infra-red temperature measurements, cooling analysis and cooling prediction using commercial simulation software. To measure surface temperature of the polymers, compounding of polypropylene and polystyrene with carbon black masterbatch was performed to make materials opaque for the IR camera. The effects of addition of carbon black masterbatch were analysed using differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Sapphire windows formed part of the mould wall and allowed thermal measurements using an IR camera. They were laser machined on their inside surfaces to generate a range of finishes and structures. Their topographies were analysed using laser confocal microscope. The surface energy of sapphire windows was measured and compared to typical mould steel, employing a contact angle measurement technique and calculated using Owens-Wendt theory. A heating chamber was designed and manufactured to study spreading of polymer melts on sapphire and steel substrates. A design of experiments approach was taken to investigate the influence of surface finish and the main processing parameters on polymer cooling during microinjection moulding. Cooling curves were obtained over an area of 1.92 by 1.92 mm of the sapphire window. These experiments were conducted on the Battenfeld Microsystem 50 microinjection moulding machine. A simulation study of polymer cooling during the microinjection moulding process was performed using Moldflow software. Particular interest was paid to the effect of the values of the interfacial heat transfer coefficient (HTC) on the simulated cooling predictions. Predicted temperature curves were compared to experimentally obtained temperature distributions, to obtain HTC values valid for the material and processing parameters.

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