| How to accurately Use Copper Alloys in Molds |
|
The origin of mold design and moldmaking in China is traceable to metal stamping die makers, rubber moldmakers and die cast die makers. Early pioneers in plastics went to these established tradesmen because of their history in designing and building tools for production, the preciseness of workmanship as well as familiarity with 2-D and 3-D shapes. Unfortunately the majority of molds designed and built today have not evolved much since those very early practices. Most designs fail to truly consider the dynamics of the molding process. Because of the lack of willingness and insight to change, tool steels are the most widely used and accepted materials for cores and cavities. While tool steels do have a place in designs, there is a tendency to overuse tool steel, which in effect sacrifices mold performance. Oftentimes the only design and build criteria given is to construct a device just adequate enough to make an acceptable plastic part. Production efficiency is not always a factor of importance. Long gone in profitable molding operations are molding machines with magnetic relays, mechanical timers, manually set limit switches that controlled machine motion and would only do one action at a time. Combine the molding machines available today with plastic resins and support equipment, and it is obvious that the mold is now the weakest link in the profit chain. The mold is all too often the limiting factor in the molding process. It is hard to believe that there are a significant number of molders, mold designers and builders that continue to follow stagnant or outdated designs, for some very irrational reasons. It is only in the last few years that processors are finally placing expectations on mold builders to meet minimum or guaranteed mold cycle times. Where do mold designers and moldmakers look for answers? Copper Alloys The presence of copper alloys in a mold and the extent of that usage merely means that at least someone in the design chain had some awareness and understanding of the benefits of using those materials. The extent of copper alloy use, the success of its application as well as the life of those components will ultimately be determined by the selected alloy in combination with the design of the application. High Conductivity Copper Alloys Copper alloys with lower conductivity do have applications in molds, but not as plastic forming surfaces. Relative to conductivity, there are hundreds of copper alloys produced throughout the world. It is important to recognize that among the various copper alloys, thermal as well as the relative electrical conductivity, can vary to extremes depending on the product designation. This variance also can be prevalent with the same alloy designation coming from different suppliers/producers. This is because there are subtle variances in the equipment that manufacturers use. There also can be variances in the quality of feedstock used to make the alloys. The best alloys available for thermal conductivity as well as for overall performance in molds are all virgin materials for feedstock—no back scrap or reprocessed elements in the chemistry. Primary Design Considerations At best there can be no more than 25 percent of the heat removed from the resin by the cavity surfaces. Therefore, high conductivity alloys or overly complex cooling channels on the cavity side of the mold will provide the least cooling benefit. So a cores only approach is recommended with copper alloys. The point is, people that have experience using copper alloys in molds know the facts and have seen the overall benefits, will rarely design a mold without using copper alloys to one degree or another. Cycle Limiting Factors Benefits With the arrival of some new copper alloys in the market place in the last three years, combined with experience and refinements in design/utilization concepts, copper alloys are finally entering a new era of acceptance. Hardness In addition to affecting the chemical structure, the aging process also yields controlled levels of thermal and electrical conductivity. Precipitation hardening is done by heating an alloy to a specific temperature, then holding at that temperature for a predetermined period of time, then air-cooled. For stability reasons aging is done only after a solution annealing process. This means that the alloy properties are changed when exposed to time and temperature while in use—by welding, surface treatments or some incident that heats the component to a temperature above the original aging temperature. Exposure to time and relative temperatures over the original aging temperature for a specific alloy can either increase or decrease the properties of the alloy. An occurrence called over aging can seriously affect the short- and long-term performance of copper alloy mold components. Over aging also can soften materials to surprisingly low levels, where the components will fail because of lack of expected hardness. Or, over aging can reduce elongation and ductility to the point where the mold component fractures because it is too brittle for an application. Some alloy manufacturers provide products at the ultimate hardness in efforts to entice buyers with the highest hardness products. While other manufacturers provide products at the optimum, which in effect allows for the slight increase in hardness and lower ductility as a result of continued aging. Providing products at the ultimate hardness is a disservice to users because the ductility of the product is low—generally 3 percent elongation or less, which when used in molding and exposed to ongoing time and temperature, exhibit even less ductility and eventually fail due to fracture. If someone told you that two years after running a mold 24/7, your mold components made of a copper alloy—chosen because it was 38-40 Rockwell “C”—would start fracturing like glass, would you believe them? Those that don’t soon find out that the copper alloys at 30 Rockwell “C” are the superior choice and will yield the longest lasting components. In other words, buyer beware of copper alloys offered at or near 40 Rockwell “C”. Grain Structure Significance of Machining Equipment Abrasive Resins Hot Runner Gate Drops Coatings and Platings The Material Supplier Relationship Paying the Price to Advance
About First-rate Mold Solution Co., Ltd. About www.firstratemold.com
|
