notes on moulding

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@ -178,3 +178,196 @@ A material being worked on hot has its deformations eliminated as fast as they a
A material is said to be cold when $T < 0.35T_m$.
# Powder Processes
Poweders can plowflow if forces between them are low
With small amounts of binder, they can form "*plastic*" materials like clay.
A *slurry* can be formed with a liquid carrier (where there is enough liquid to separate particles).
In a slurry, often you want to reduce liquid content but avoid the particles touching or attracting
each other.
Adding a *deflocculant*[^d_deflocculant] results in the formation of a stable *slip*.
Making the powders is often quite expensive when you have a controlled size distribution.
## Clay and Ceramics
Clay is an abundant raw material but it needs to be milled and screen for a controlled size
distribution.
When mixed with water it forms a *plastic* material.
Structural clay products include bricks, tiles, and pipes.
Other proucts include whitewares such as porcelain, pottery, and tableware.
Ways to form the clay include pressing, isostatic pressing, extrusion, and machining.
Engineering ceramics (e.g. silicon carbide, alumina) are shaped with small amounts of binder ---
commonly pressed or isostatically pressed.
## Slip Casting
1. Pour slip into a mould (e.g. plaster of Paris)
2. The mould is extremely water absorbing. This results in the remaining part developing some
structural integrity.
3. Remove the mould and place in the oven to reduce water content.
4. Fire to harden
5. Add glaze and fire again.
Drying leads to shrinkage and potential cracking.
It also gives strength and allows for handling and maybe machining.
![](./images/vimscrot-2022-02-28T22:03:43,392791602+00:00.png)
## Sintering of Metals and Ceramics
![](./images/vimscrot-2022-02-28T22:17:23,587537954+00:00.png)
Atoms diffuse to points of contact, creating bridges and reducing the pore size.
Diffusion is driven by a desire to reduce the surface area as surfaces are regions of high energy.
## Powdering Metallurgy
- Competitive with processes like casting, forging, machining
- Used when the melting point is too high, a chemical reaction occurs at melting point, the part is
too hard to machine, or a very large quantity (on the order of 100 000) of the part is needed
- Nearly 70% of parts produced is by powder metallurgy
- Good dimensional accuracy
- Controlloable porosity
- Size range from balls in ball point pens to parts weighing 50 kg
Basic steps of powder metallurgy:
1. Powder production (commonly atomization) --- this is often a costly process and you must minimize
oxidation of the metal
2. Blending/mixing --- add binders to keep the particles together and lubricants to reduce damage to
dies and aid consolidation
3. Powder consolidation
- Shaping in a die
- 100-900 MPa of pressure applied
- Fast process as no heat needs to be removed
4. Sintering at $0.7T_m$ to $0.9T_m$
Shaping equipment has no requirement to be able to withstand high temperatures and the sintering
equipment does not have the need for complex designs.
This separates problems, making them easier to design.
The pressing equipment is costly but the time spent pressing is quite small, allowing for greater
throughput.
Additionally, the furnace can operate continuously and is simple and cost effective.
![](./images/vimscrot-2022-02-28T22:50:45,735174146+00:00.png)
### Green Density
The *green density* is a fraction of the true density.
A low green density will result in high shrinkage on sintering.
## Moulding
Moulding is a shaping process used for viscous materials (typically polymers and glasses).
Here the material can hold a shape unsupported but not for very long or under even small stresses.
In order to mould a material we must raise the temperature above the glass transition temperature,
$T_g$.
At this temperature, the C-C bond in the chapolymer chain are able to easily rotate around each
other.
Large side chains or molecules on the main chain make it harder to rotate these bonds, making
$T_g$ higher.
Polar groups (e.g. chloride, cynaide, and hydroxide) have also hinder bond rotation.
More information about polymers
[here](https://notes.alv.cx/notes/uni/mmme/1029_materials_and_manufacturing/materials.html#polymers-1).
## Extrusion
Extrusion produced parts of constant cross section, like pipes and rods.
The process is used primarily with thermoplastics and 60% of polymers are prepared by extrusion.
![](./images/vimscrot-2022-03-01T18:28:42,810593415+00:00.png)
## Blow Moulding
Blow moulding is a rapid process with low labour costs.
It produces hollow components that do not require a constant thickness, such as
bottles, petrol tanks, and drums.
Common materials to blow mould are HDPE, LDPE, PP, PET, and PVC.
There are three common types of blow moulding:
- Extrusion blow moulding
- Injetion blow moulding
- Stretch-blow processes
However, they involve the following stages:
1. A tubular preform, called a *parison* (a word I haven't been able to remember since GCSE) is
produced by either extrusion of injection moulding
2. The *parison* is transferred into a cooled split-mould
3. The *parison* is sealed and inflated to take up the shape of the mould
4. The moulding is let to cool and solifidies under pressure
5. The mould is opened and moulding is ejected
![](./images/vimscrot-2022-03-01T18:30:18,545745201+00:00.png)
## Injection Moulding
1. Powder or pellets of polymer heated to liquid state (low viscosity)
2. Under pressure, the liquid polymer is forced into a mould through a *sprue*, a small opening
3. The pressurized material is held in the mould until it solidifies
4. The mould is opened and the part is removed by ejector pins
Selection was cancelled by keystroke or right-click.
![](./images/vimscrot-2022-03-01T21:30:56,215686378+00:00.png)
Theromoplastics are most common in injection moulding.
A very high level of detail is attainable through this process and it produced little waste.
Similar to [Die Casting](#die-casting-high-pressure-die-casting), you must consider corners (avoid
sharp ones), draft angles (so you can get the part out), and section thickness (using ribs instead
is preferable).
Due to the high capital cost, injection moulding is only economical at high production volumes.
### Co-Injection Moulding
There is *sequential moulding* (one after the other) and *co-injection moulding* (together).
These processes reduce assembly costs by integrating the parts and can use low grade recycled
material for the inside of a component.
It also allows for a part have to have multiple colours.
This process requires special attention to be payed to shrinking/cooling.
## Rotational Moulding
Rotational moulding involves coating the insides of a heated mould with a thermoplastic.
It is a low pressure alternative to blow moulding for making hollow components and is used
for large components such as storage tanks, boat hulls, kayaks, and cones.
## Moulding for Thermosetting Polymers
There are two types:
a. Compression moulding
b. Transfer moulding
![](./images/vimscrot-2022-03-01T22:15:05,965638775+00:00.png)
### Compression Moulding
For thermoplastics, the mould is cooled before removoal so the part will not lose its shape.
Thermosets, however, may be ejected while they are hot so long as curing is complete.
The process is slow but the material only moves a short distance and has lower mould pressures.
It also does minimal damage to reinforcing fibres in composites and it is possible to make large
parts.
More manual labour is required and has longer cycle times than injection moulding.
# Glossary
[^d_deflocculant]: a substance which, when added to scattered particles in suspension, causes a reduction in apparent viscosity. Deflocculants are substances which prevent flocculation by increasing zeta potential and therefore the repulsive forces between particles. (<https://digitalfire.com/article/deflocculants%3A+a+detailed+overview>)

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@ -318,6 +318,19 @@ They are made of long carbon-carbon chains.
![](./images/vimscrot-2021-11-01T11:13:39,370133338+00:00.png)
## Industrially Important Polymers
The worldwide production of polymers in 2019 was $368\times10^6$ tonnes and the majority is from
just 5 polymers:
- Polyethylene (PE) --- wire insulation, flexible tubing, squeezy bottles
- Polypropyene (PP) --- carpet fibres, ropes, liquid containers, pipes, chairs in Shoreham Academy
- Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) --- bottles, hoses, pipes, valves, wire insulation, toys
- Polystyrene (PS) --- packaging foam, egg cartons, lighting panels
- Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) --- carbonated drinks bottles
All of these materials are low cost.
## Thermoplastics
The simplest polymer is poly(ethene):