Micro moulding machine and process
11724425 · 2023-08-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C2045/0091
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29L2031/756
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C45/021
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C45/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C45/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C45/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A micro moulding machine and process for forming small plastic parts for the medical device industry. The machine adds heat in two steps to a precision sized plastic pellet and then displaces the entire pellet volume into the mould cavity. A substantial amount of heat is added to the pellet by forcing it through an orifice very near the gate of the mould. The pneumatic pressure to drive the pellet through the orifice is controlled to regulate the amount of heat introduced into the pellet.
Claims
1. A plastic moulding process comprising the sequential steps of: forming a cylindrical precision pellet of volume V and having a diameter of D; placing said cylindrical precision pellet into a stationary nozzle having a cylindrical injection path and having a diameter D, a backer plate coupled to said stationary nozzle, said backer plate having a backer plate orifice aligned with said cylindrical injection path, the backer plate orifice has a diameter smaller than D; conductively heat the cylindrical precision pellet in the stationary nozzle for a fixed period of time T; pushing the cylindrical precision pellet through the backer plate orifice for time t shorter than T, thereby adding heat to said cylindrical precision pellet; injecting said cylindrical precision pellet into a mould cavity having a volume V, said backer plate in thermal contact with the stationary nozzle and said stationary nozzle in thermal contact with said mould cavity.
2. A plastic moulding process comprising the sequential steps of: cutting a round rod of plastic material to form a cylindrical precision pellet of volume V and having a diameter of D; placing said cylindrical precision pellet into a stationary nozzle having a cylindrical injection path and having a diameter D; said cylindrical injection path defined by the motion of a reciprocating injection pin located in said stationary nozzle, the reciprocating injection pin being powered by a pneumatic ram, the pneumatic ram driving the injector pin along the cylindrical injection path; conductively heat the cylindrical precision pellet in the stationary nozzle for a fixed period of time T; pushing the cylindrical precision pellet with said reciprocating injection pin, through an orifice with a diameter smaller than D for a time period t that is shorter than T, thereby adding an amount of heat to said cylindrical precision pellet proportional to the time period t, pneumatic pressure supplied to the reciprocating injection pin from the pneumatic ram determines the amount of heat supplied to said cylindrical precision pellet; injecting said cylindrical precision pellet into a mould cavity with a volume V, through a mould opening defining said orifice, thereby displacing the entire pellet volume into said mould cavity.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(12) The Process of the Invention
(13) Overall the process is sequential and repeats as a cycle.
(14) The process may be considered to begin with the step 1 creation of a precise sized pellet 30 from a preform 20, which is shown in detail in
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(16) In some embodiments, the pellet 30 may be pre-moulded into the required cylindrical shape, length and volume.
(17) Next in step 2, as represented in
(18) Next in step 3, as represented in
(19) In the next, step 4, as represented in
(20) In the next step 5, as represented in the flow chart of
(21) Steps 4 and 5 occur essentially simultaneously. They are partitioned and illustrated in sequence as
(22) Once the plastic 31 is sufficiently cool, the resultant part is removed from the mould 16, as represented in step 6 of the flow-chart of
(23) The electrical nozzle heating system establishes a repeatable and stable temperature gradient along the nozzle, backer plate, and mould path. Typically the nozzle is the hottest element at temperature T with the backer plate a few degrees less based mostly on the amount of power exerted on the pellet to force it through the orifice. The mould is usually the coldest element in the path by intention. This process when repeated produces another part of essentially identical heat inputs. The plastic degradation is both slight and repeatable, a characteristic that is desirable for medical parts. The temperature differentials between the elements along the injection path are very well controlled and parts are made with great uniformity and reproducibility.
(24) The Apparatus of the Invention
(25) In furtherance of the description provided above the components of the embodiment shown in
(26) Turning first to
(27) In both embodiments, a pellet 30 has been loaded into the injector pin cavity that is an elongate cylindrical cavity 33 formed in the nozzle 12. The nozzle 12 carries an injection pin 42 that has a small diameter pintle nose 43 seen most clearly in
(28) After the pellet 30 is loaded into the elongate cylindrical cavity as seen in
(29) Next, as shown in
(30) Alternatively, as shown in the embodiment of
(31) The last moments of the high speed injection are shown in
(32) In at least one instance the machine as shown in
(33) An example of such a component is shown in
(34) The process of forming a moulded component such as is shown in
(35) In summary, in the various embodiments shown and described, after a relatively long thermal heating interval T an injection pin enters the nozzle and pushes the softened plastic through a small aperture along the injection path into the mould, this injection phase has a very short duration t. The amount of work done and therefore the amount additional or secondary heat supplied to the pellet is directly proportional to this time interval t. The time interval may be controlled by the air pressure supplied to the air cylinder as well as the valve duration of the controller.
(36) The mould 16 is down stream from the heater 36 and is relatively cool therefore when the hot plastic 31 is displaced into the cold mould it very quickly cools and solidifies. By displacing essentially 100% of the plastic into a mould cavity there is no waste. Adding heat quickly along the path by forcing the plastic through the orifice into the cold mould very little time is spent at high temperature reducing chemical degradation of the plastic.
(37) Typically, there will be a two-piece mould 16 with a parting line 40 of conventional design and contrition. However, the coldness of the mould allows the mould to be made with clearances that allow quick expulsion of air 17 from the mould by the plastic 31 without the creation of flash along the parting lines of the mould as seen at reference numeral 17 and described above.
(38) The mould 16 itself butts up against a backer plate 14, which is in turn in contact with the nozzle 12. Placing the backer plate and nozzle in contact with each other causes the mould to warm above ambient temperature. However the tight control of nozzle temperature means that there is a tightly controlled temperature profile between these components and the mould is relatively “cold” and the temperature difference between the nozzle and the mould proper is very stable. In essence, the controlled heating within the nozzle establishes a very reproducible temperature gradient between the nozzle, pintle plate and mould structures. Although well above ambient temperature the mould is downstream thermally and is therefore “cold” by comparison.
(39) The “cold” mould eliminates flash on the part even though the mould parting line is quite leaky to air. The plastic when it reaches the parting line of the mould “freezes” sealing the mould cavity. As described above the and during injection the injection pin pintle enters the backer plate displacing essentially 100% of the heated plastic into the mould. After a short cooling time the mould is opened and the injection moulded part is ejected. The process then repeats to create the next part.
(40) A representative graph of the relative temperatures of the relevant components as well as the changes which occur to the pellet/material as the moulding process occurs is illustrated in
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