Weld Line Factors for Thermoplastics

2017-01-0481

03/28/2017

Features
Event
WCX™ 17: SAE World Congress Experience
Authors Abstract
Content
Weld lines occur when melt flow fronts meet during the injection molding of plastic parts. It is important to investigate the weld line because the weld line area can induce potential failure of structural application. In this paper, a weld line factor (W-L factor) was adopted to describe the strength reduction to the ultimate strength due to the appearance of weld line. There were two engineering thermoplastics involved in this study, including one neat PP and one of talc filled PP plastics. The experimental design was used to investigate four main injection molding parameters (melt temperature, mold temperature, injection speed and packing pressure). Both the tensile bar samples with/without weld lines were molded at each process settings. The sample strength was obtained by the tensile tests under two levels of testing speed (5mm/min and 200mm/min) and testing temperatures (room temperature and -30°C). The results showed that different materials had various values of W-L factor. For neat PP, the W-L factor was high and independent to injection molding parameters or testing temperatures. For the talc filled PP, the W-L factor reduced significantly and was not sensitive to the injection molding parameters or testing speed. The talc particles played dominant role in reducing the W-L factor. The influence of packing pressure could be ignored.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-0481
Pages
6
Citation
Sun, X., Tibbenham, P., Zhou, J., Zeng, D. et al., "Weld Line Factors for Thermoplastics," SAE Technical Paper 2017-01-0481, 2017, https://doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-0481.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 28, 2017
Product Code
2017-01-0481
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English