Method for simultaneous closed loop control of gas assist and gas counter pressure in an injection molding process relative to plastic melt pressure and plastic melt flow position
11718003 ยท 2023-08-08
Assignee
Inventors
- William Francis Lawless, III (Medford, MA, US)
- H. Kenneth Hanson, III (Cincinnati, OH, US)
- Gene Michael Altonen (West Chester, OH)
- Chow-Chi Huang (West Chester, OH)
Cpc classification
B29C2945/76949
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2945/76812
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C45/174
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C45/1704
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2945/76301
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2045/1727
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2945/76779
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C45/77
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2945/76167
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2045/1728
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2945/76933
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2945/76939
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2945/76936
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A controller for an injection molding system is in communication with a melt flow control unit, a gas assist control unit, and a gas counter pressure control unit. The controller can effect real-time adjustments to gas assist pressure and/or gas counter pressure as a function of melt pressure or flow front position.
Claims
1. A method for controlling an injection molding filling cycle, comprising: injecting a molten thermoplastic material into a mold cavity; injecting a first gas at an initial pressure into a portion of the mold cavity downstream of a flow front of the injected molten thermoplastic material; determining a melt pressure of the injected molten thermoplastic material; determining a flow front position of the injected molten thermoplastic material; injecting, after the flow front has reached a first part specific position in the mold cavity, a second gas at an initial pressure into a portion of the mold cavity upstream of the flow front of the injected molten thermoplastic material; increasing the pressure of the second gas until the melt flow reaches a second part specific position of the mold cavity; changing, in real-time during a single injection molding filling cycle, the pressure of the first gas at least in part based on at least one of (i) the determined melt pressure of the injected molten thermoplastic material, or (ii) the determined flow front position of the injected molten thermoplastic material; and changing, in real-time during the single injection molding filling cycle, in addition to increasing the pressure of the second gas until the melt flow reaches a second part specific position of the mold cavity, the pressure of the second gas at least in part based on at least one of (i) the determined melt pressure of the injected molten thermoplastic material, or (ii) the determined flow front position of the injected molten thermoplastic material.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein in injecting the molten thermoplastic material into the mold cavity, the molten thermoplastic material is injected so as to ensure that a melt pressure variation as a function of time substantially conforms to a melt pressure profile comprising one or more time intervals during which the melt pressure is substantially constant.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the melt pressure during at least one of the one or more time intervals is at least in part based on the determined flow front position of the injected molten thermoplastic material.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising calculating a flow front velocity based at least in part on the determined flow front position of the injected molten thermoplastic material.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein changing the pressure of the first gas is at least in part based on the calculated flow front velocity.
6. The method of claim 4, wherein changing the pressure of the second gas is at least in part based on the calculated flow front velocity.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the determined flow front position coincides with a change in geometry of the mold cavity, the change in geometry including at least one of a change in thickness, a change in direction, or a change in angle.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the determined flow front position is upstream of a change in geometry of the mold cavity, the change in geometry including at least one of a change in thickness, a change in direction, or a change in angle.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the determined flow front position is downstream of a change in geometry of the mold cavity, the change in geometry including at least one of a change in thickness, a change in direction, or a change in angle.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the determined flow front position is upstream of a change in geometry of the mold cavity, the change in geometry including at least one of a change in thickness, a change in direction, or a change in angle, and determining a further flow front position that is downstream of the change in geometry of the mold cavity, and effecting a further change of the pressure of at least one of the first gas or the second gas based on the further flow front position.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter that is regarded as the present disclosure, it is believed that the disclosure will be more fully understood from the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. Some of the figures may have been simplified by the omission of selected elements for the purpose of more clearly showing other elements. Such omissions of elements in some figures are not necessarily indicative of the presence or absence of particular elements in any of the exemplary embodiments, except as may be explicitly delineated in the corresponding written description. None of the drawings are necessarily to scale.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(9) Referring to the figures in detail,
(10) The controller 32 can include a microprocessor, a memory, and one or more communication links. By way of the communication links, the controller 32 can send commands or other information to other units in the control system 20 to initiate, activate or adjust injection molding cycles, melt pressure changes, gas assist pressure, gas counter-pressure, and/or other processes that can be controlled by the corresponding units. For example, for each aspect of the injection molding process, including melt pressure control and gas control, among other possibilities, the controller can change set points or timing of transitions from one operation state to another, as described in more detail below. The controller 32 also can receive, by way of communication links, information about process conditions, environmental conditions, operator commands, etc. The information can be sent to the controller 32 from the other units, from an operator, and/or from a variety of sensors (not shown) disposed at or outside of the injection molding apparatus 10. The controller 32 can use the received information to compute required changes in the injection molding process and communicate these changes to the other units in the control system.
(11) The Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 can receive from the controller 32 a command to initiate an injection molding cycle. The Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 can be communicatively connected to an actuator 34 that can be, in turn, mechanically connected to a reciprocating screw 36. The actuator 34, based on a command from the Melt Pressure Control Unit 22, can begin turning the reciprocating screw 36 and can adjust the rotation rate of the reciprocating screw based on the signals from the Melt Pressure Control Unit 22.
(12) Pellets P supplied to a hopper 40 can be melted by a heater and can supply or replace the melted thermoplastic material displaced by the screw 36 through the nozzle 42 and into the mold cavity 44.
(13) The Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 is also in signal communication with a melt pressure sensor 46 for the purpose of determining the melt pressure of the injected molten thermoplastic material. The Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 can receive the melt pressure signal indicative of melt pressure from the melt pressure sensor 46 and can adjust the actuation of the screw 36 in view of the melt pressure signal data by signaling the actuator 34 to effect the desired adjustments. The melt pressure sensor 46 may be in fluid communication with the molten thermoplastic material, or alternatively, sensors indicative of melt pressure may be provided elsewhere, as a proxy for melt pressure. The melt pressure sensor 46 is a sensing device that senses pressure at one of: (i) a back of the piston; (ii) a load cell at a back of the screw; or (iii) in a melt stream at a location downstream of a tip of the screw 36, or anywhere between the screw tip and a cavity gate.
(14) The melt pressure sensor 46 can facilitate detection (direct or indirect) of the actual melt pressure (e.g., the measured melt pressure) of the molten thermoplastic material in, at, or near the nozzle 42. The melt pressure sensor 46 may or may not be in direct contact with the molten thermoplastic material. In one embodiment, the melt pressure sensor 46 can be a pressure transducer that transmits an electrical signal to an input of the control system 20 in response to the melt pressure at the nozzle 42. In other embodiments, the melt pressure sensor 46 can facilitate monitoring of any of a variety of additional or alternative characteristics of the molten thermoplastic material at the nozzle 42 that might indicate melt pressure, such as temperature, viscosity, and/or flow rate, for example. If the melt pressure sensor 46 is not located within the nozzle 42, but is instead located upstream or downstream of the nozzle 42, the control system 20 can be set, configured, and/or programmed with logic, commands, and/or executable program instructions to provide appropriate correction factors to estimate or calculate values for the measured characteristic in the nozzle 42 based on the actual position of the melt pressure sensor 46. It is to be appreciated that sensors other than a melt pressure sensor can be employed to measure any other characteristics of the molten thermoplastic material, the screw 36, the barrel 48, or the like that is known in the art, such as temperature, viscosity, flow rate, strain, velocity, or one or more of any other characteristics that are indicative of any of these.
(15) The melt pressure sensor 46 may or may not be in direct contact with the melt. In some implementations, the melt pressure sensor 46 may be replaced by a different sensor that generates a signal that can be used to estimate the melt pressure. Additionally or alternatively, the Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 may be in signal communication with a different sensor that indicates the rate of injection or a total amount of thermoplastic material injected into the mold cavity, from which the melt pressure of the injected material may be determined.
(16) The signal from the melt pressure sensor 46 can be processed by the Melt Pressure Control Unit 22. For example, the Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 may calculate a melt-pressure error between the melt pressure determined by measurement and a target melt pressure communicated by the controller 32. Using the melt-pressure error, the Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 may calculate the signal that drives the actuator 34 of the reciprocating screw 36. The actuator 34 may increase the torque or force applied to the reciprocating screw 36, thereby increasing the melt pressure, or, conversely, decrease the torque or force applied to the reciprocating screw 36, thereby decreasing the melt pressure. In this manner closed-loop control of the melt pressure may be implemented. In some implementations, a target slew rate (i.e., rate of change) of melt pressure may be specified for at least a portion of the injection molding cycle. The controller may communicate the target slew rate to the Melt Pressure Control Unit, and the control unit may actuate the reciprocating screw to minimize the slew-rate error, i.e. the difference between slew rate computed from, for example, the melt-pressure sensor data and the target slew rate of melt pressure. The control of actuation of the reciprocating screw 36 in view of the measured melt pressure is described below in more detail.
(17) The controller is in further signal communication with Gas Assist Control Unit (GACU) 24. The GACU 24 is configured to inject a gas into the mold cavity 44 through a Gas Assist Pin 50, which may, for example, be provided in a pneumatic channel 52 bored into a mold core 54 of the injection molding system 10. The injected gas, which may comprise nitrogen, carbon dioxide, a mixture such as air, or another suitable gas, but is preferably an inert gas, may be supplied to the Gas Assist Pin 50 from a gas reservoir, a gas generator, or a compressor (not shown). The GACU 24 may control a valve that regulates the flow of the gas from the Gas Assist Pin 50 and into the mold cavity 44. The degree of opening of the valve may increase the flow of gas into the mold cavity and lead to the build-up of Gas Assist pressure. The GACU 24 can comprise a gas-assist pressure sensor 49 that senses the pressure of the gas upstream of the mold cavity or within the mold cavity itself. The GACU 24 may use the signal of the gas-assist pressure sensor to compute a control signal for the valve, thereby allowing closed-loop control of the gas-assist pressure. The GACU 24 may use a closed-loop control algorithm to minimize errors between gas-assist pressure set points and measured and computed gas-assist pressures. Set points of gas assist pressure may be communicated to the GACU 24 by the controller 32. The controller 32 may follow a predetermined time sequence of gas-assist set points stored in its memory or may adjust the set points based on the measured process conditions. The measured process conditions may include progress of filling the mold cavity, melt-flow-front position, determined viscosity of the melt, environmental temperature and humidity, and/or other factors. The changes in set points of the gas-assist cycle based on a variety of measurements are discussed below.
(18) The controller also can be in a communicative connection with a Gas Counter-Pressure Control Unit (GCPCU) 26. The GCPCU 26 is configured to inject a gas into the mold cavity through a Gas Counter Pressure (GCP) supply port 56. The GCP gas can also be vented out of the mold cavity through a GCP vent port 58, which, like the gas assist supply line, may be bored into the mold core 54. The GCP gas, which may comprise nitrogen, carbon dioxide, a mixture such as air, or another suitable gas, but preferably an inert gas, may be supplied to the GCP supply port 56 from a gas reservoir, a gas generator, or a compressor (not shown). The GCPCU 26 may control a valve that regulates the flow of the counter-pressure gas from the GCP Supply port 56 into the mold cavity. The degree of opening of the valve may increase the flow of gas into the mold cavity and lead to the build-up of gas counter pressure. The GCPCU 26 can include a GCP sensor 59 that senses the pressure of the gas downstream of the flow front within mold cavity. The GCPCU 26 may use the signal of the GCP sensor 59 to compute a control signal for the valve, thereby allowing closed-loop control of the GCP process. GCPCU may use closed-loop control algorithm to minimize errors between GCP pressure set points and measured and computed GCP pressures. Set points of GCP may be communicated to the GCPCU by the controller. The controller may follow a predetermined time sequence of GCP set points stored in its memory or may adjust the set points based on the measured process conditions. The measured process conditions may include progress of filling the mold cavity, melt flow-front position, determined viscosity of the melt, environmental temperature and humidity, and/or other factors. The changes in set points of the GCP cycle based on a variety of measurements are discussed below.
(19) Additionally or alternatively, either the GACU 24 or the GPCU 26 (or both) may control a volume flow rate or a mass flow rate of the corresponding gas. In the corresponding implementations, the GACU 24 and/or the GCPCU 26 may include a fluid flow sensor or sensors. Thus, the closed-loop control of the gas-assist process and/or gas counter-pressure may include controlling gas flow rates as an alternative or in addition to pressure control.
(20) With continued reference to
(21) The controller 32 also can be in a communicative connection with the Virtual Cavity Sensor (VCS) 30 to determine the pressure of the melt within the cavity 44 of the mold without the direct measurement of the cavity pressure. The VCS 30 may communicate data indicative of the determined cavity pressure directly to the controller 32 or may use the cavity pressure to compute adjustments to the set points for the operations of MPCU 22, GACU 24, and/or the GCPCU 26.
(22) In some implementations, the controller may be in direct signal communication with sensors or sensor systems that provide information about the state and progress of injection of the melt into the mold cavity. The sensors for determining the flow front or melt travel position may include, by way of example, a cavity pressure sensor, a thermocouple, or a strain gauge. The controller 32 may make adjustments to the operations of any or all the MPCU 22, GACU 24, or GCPCU 26 based on the signals from the directly-connected sensors and with or without the use of either or both the MTCU 28 or VCS 30.
(23) In other implementations, a Melt Pressure Control Unit 22 may be integrated into the controller 32. Likewise, the VCS 30 may be integrated into the controller 32.
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(26) The four traces in the graph illustrated in
(27) At the beginning of an injection molding cycle, also known as a fill cycle, gas counter-pressure ramps up as the counter-pressure gas fills the mold cavity that may have been fully evacuated (e.g., to atmospheric pressure) at the conclusion of the previous cycle. The time rate of change of the gas counter-pressure, as represented by the slope of the dashed curve in region I of
(28) Once the gas counter-pressure achieves or approaches a target value, the controller may signal to the MPCU 22 to commence the injection of the melted thermoplastic or resin into the mold cavity, as illustrated in region II of
(29) As the melt pressure near the nozzle begins to increase in region II, the melt may begin to flow into the mold cavity, as is illustrated by the melt travel position curve in the same region. As the melt begins to flow out of the nozzle and the gate into the mold cavity, the melt may encounter little mechanical resistance from sheer forces exerted on the flowing thermoplastic by the cavity walls. On the other hand, the melt encounters some resistance from the gas counter-pressure that may be maintained at a nearly constant level in region II. Once some of the mold cavity begins to fill with the flowing thermoplastic, several effects may lead to increased resistance to the flow and, subsequently, to the requirement for increasing nozzle pressure to maintain the melt travel velocity. One effect may be the increase in sheer forces as the melt comes in contact with the walls of the cavity. Another effect may be due to the cooling of the thermoplastic and a subsequent increase in its viscosity as it enters the cavity. Therefore, as can be seen from the curves in region II of
(30) It may be advantageous to control the flow-front velocity of the thermoplastic to produce a part with desired aesthetic as well as mechanical, optical, or other characteristics. In some circumstances, it may be desired, for example, to maintain a nearly constant flow-front velocity, as is illustrated in
(31) Toward the right-most edge of region II of
(32) In region IIIa, the controller 32 may signal to the GACU 22 to initiate the gas assist process. The precise timing of initiating the injection of the assisting gas may be based on a predetermined schedule or based on, at least in part, the melt pressure level, pressure of the melt in the cavity, flow front position, and may vary based on part geometries. Once the controller determines the time to initiate the gas assist process and signals the GACU 24, the GACU 24, in turn, may open the valve to allow the flow of the assisting gas through the pin into the mold cavity. The assisting gas may form an expanding bubble within the thermoplastic injected into the cavity and contribute to the continued advancement of the flow front. The GACU 24 may adjust the pressure of the assisting gas based on the measurement of the position of the advancing flow front, or the flow-front velocity which can be computed, for example from multiple flow-front positions. In some implementations, other sensor inputs can be detected by the controller 32 and integrated into the decision process for adjusting gas assist, gas counter-pressure and melt injection set points.
(33) Continuing with the region IIIa of
(34) In region IIIb,
(35) Transitioning to the next stage of the filling process, the gas counter-pressure may be reduced, as is illustrated in region IV of
(36) Once the controller initiates the gas-assist process, three distinct pressure sources are acting on the molten thermoplastic material within in the mold cavity: the injected thermoplastic melt pressure, the gas assist pressure, and the gas counter-pressure. The interaction of the three pressures also can be influenced by the mold cavity geometry, surface chemistry, and thermal properties of the mold. To achieve molded articles that are free of voids, short-shots, blow outs (i.e., the gas assist gas blowing through the flow front or some other wall of the molded article) or other defects, it is desirable to maintain control of each of the gas assist pressure, the gas counterpressure, and the melt pressure. The controller of the present disclosure advantageously communicates with sensors indicative of all three, and has the ability to direct adjustments of any or all three, in real time. This enables the injection molding system, for example, to adjust any or all of the gas assist pressure, the counterpressure, or the melt pressure to accommodate for variations in geometry of a mold cavity during a given shot. In instances where the controller 32 is making adjustments to one or more of these variables based on changes in geometry of the mold cavity, such as changes in thickness, changes in direction, or changes in angles, the controller 32 may be programmed to make adjustments based on detection of the flow front reaching a location that coincides with the location of such a change in geometry within the mold cavity. Alternately, the controller 32 may be programmed to make adjustments based on detection of the flow front reaching a location that is upstream of the location of such a change in geometry within the mold cavity. As a further alternate, or in addition, the controller 32 may be programmed to make adjustments based on detection of the flow front reaching a location that is downstream of the location of such a change in geometry within the mold cavity.
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(38) As described in a second block, 72, Gas Counter Pressure depends on Plastic Melt Pressure and Flow Front Position. The ratio is part dependent, but the counter pressure will be less than the Melt Pressure.
(39) As described in a third block, 74, once the melt flow front reaches a position, (the optimal location within a given mold cavity to initiate gas assist pressure being part-dependent), the Gas Assist Pressure (GAP) is initiated. Gas Counter Pressure remains constant.
(40) Next, as described in block 76 of
(41) Turning next to block 78, Gas Counter Pressure decreases to zero once the flow front position has reached 80%-100 of end of cavity (the optimal position of reducing the gas counter pressure to zero, for example by venting through the Gas Counter Pressure vent 58 (see
(42) Finally, as described in block 80 of the flow diagraph of
(43) The controller 32 may be programmed to not only make adjustments to one or more of the Gas Assist Pressure and Gas Counter Pressure based on detected melt pressure or flow front position, but may also be programmed to effect certain adjustments, such as starting or stopping introduction of Gas Assist Pressure or Gas Counter Pressure, based on other detected conditions, such as stuck valves, completion or commencement of a coining operation (such as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/198,523, published as US 2017/0001346 A1, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference), movement of collapsible core components, or detection of a pre-ejection sequence. These detected triggers are referred to generically herein as detected mold cavity conditions, and are, generally, factors other than melt pressure or flow front position, and may include commencement or completion of actuation of a collapsible (or otherwise movable) mold wall. Such active control of Gas Assist Pressure and Gas Counter Pressure provides marked advantages over the shortcomings of a purely time-dependent control of Gas Assist Pressure or Gas Counter Pressure.
(44) While various embodiments have been disclosed herein, it will be understood that variations can be made that are still within the scope of the appended claims.