USRE22899E - Injection molding granular - Google Patents

Injection molding granular Download PDF

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USRE22899E
USRE22899E US22899DE USRE22899E US RE22899 E USRE22899 E US RE22899E US 22899D E US22899D E US 22899DE US RE22899 E USRE22899 E US RE22899E
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temperature
bath
granular
plastic
mold
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C45/00Injection moulding, i.e. forcing the required volume of moulding material through a nozzle into a closed mould; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C45/17Component parts, details or accessories; Auxiliary operations
    • B29C45/72Heating or cooling

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  • This invention relates to a method of injection molding in which the temperature of the plastic material is more accurately controlled.
  • the invention may be used in the injection molding of either thermosetting or thermoplastic resins, but is particularly adaptable to the molding of thermosetting materials.
  • My invention substantially eliminates fluctuation in the temperature of the injected material. This constancy of temperature is especially important in the case of thermosetting materials because, if they are heated above a certain critical temperature for any sustained length of time, an irreversible reaction takes place, reducing their capability of being rendered fluent and injectable.
  • M invention overcomes these disadvantages of the prior art; practices by providing a uniform temperature in the injection cylinder. While the invention relates particularly to the maintenance of a uniform temperature in the injection cylinder of an injection molding machine, the principles thereof may, if desired, be applied in the maintenance of a uniform temperature in other portions of the injection molding machine, such as in a preheating chamber or in the mold halves.
  • the principal object of the invention is to hold the temperature in a portion of the injection molding machine at a uniform and constant level at which the material will be injected or will be rendered or maintained fluent.
  • Another object of the invention is to maintain the temperature of a thermosetting resin uniformly at a point below the critical temperature of the resin, and to inject the resin into a mold Application for reissue April 16, 1945,
  • Still another object is to provide a progressively increasing temperature in a portion of the injection molding machine whereby the temperature in different stages is completely uniform and is progressively increased as the plastic moves forward towards the mold.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical sectional view of one form of an apparatus embodying the principles of the present invention.
  • Figure 2 is a similar view of another form of apparatus embodying the principles of the present invention and in which the temperature of the injection cylinder is progressively increased to a point below the critical setting point of the plastic, and is then injected into the mold in which it is raised to a point above the critical setting point.
  • FIG 3 is a similar view of another form of apparatus embodyin the principles of the present invention and in which the fusion bath is electrically heated by a spiral immersion heater disposed in the bath, the bath being composed of a material which is a non-conductor of electricity when solid and a conductor of electricity when molten, electrical contacts being disposed in the bath and operative to maintain the bath at the melting point by maintaining a mixture of molten and solid bath material in intimate contact with one another; the electrical control mechanism is shown diagrammatically.
  • Figure 4 is a similar View but showing another method of maintaining the bath material at the temperature at which change of phase from the solid state occurs; in this form of the invention the bath material is formed into two zones, the minor zone being disposed around the rear portion of the injection cylinder and being maintained at a temperature slightly above the melting point or temperature of change of phase, and the main body of the bath material being maintained at the melting point and near the point wher it is all molten; the control portion of the bath at the rear thermostatically controls the application of heat to the whole body of fusion material or the like.
  • Figure 5 is a transverse vertical section through an injection cylinder equipp d With a fusion bath.
  • the expansion of. the fusion materialupon attaining the molten state is utilized to control the application of electrical energy to the heating element in the bath; the heating element is shown formed and disposed in such manner as to promote circulation of the bath material.
  • My invention involves the utilization of a bath of normally solid material at a change of phase in a jacket surrounding the portion of the injection machine to be heated as an accurate means for controlling the temperature in that portion of the injection molding machine,
  • a bath of normally solid material at a change of phase in a jacket surrounding the portion of the injection machine to be heated as an accurate means for controlling the temperature in that portion of the injection molding machine.
  • I may use metals having a melting point corresponding substantially. to the temperature to be maintained in the portion of the machine in question.
  • other materials than metals which have a constant or fixed melting point and which are adapted to be held at the melting point for prolonged periods of time and which may be melted and solidified indefinitely.
  • I may use pure metals, chemical-compounds and eutectic mixtures, all of which melt and freeze at a constant temperature.
  • I may use sulphur, naphthalene, benzophenone, and certain salts which have the desired melting point such as, for example, potassium nitrate having a melting point of 337 C., a 45-55 mixture of sodium nitrate and potassium nitrate, which has a melting point of 218 C or a 55-45 mixture of sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite which has a melting point of 221 C.
  • potassium nitrate having a melting point of 337 C.
  • a 45-55 mixture of sodium nitrate and potassium nitrate which has a melting point of 218 C or a 55-45 mixture of sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite which has a melting point of 221 C.
  • I may.
  • transition or cryohydric points of crystalline hydrates where this transformation temperature is sufiiciently high, this being another example of control materials having nonvariant points and comprising a solid and a liquid, in admixture at the transition temperature.
  • suitable alloys which may be employed', there may be mentioned an alloy consisting of equal weights of lead and tin, preferably with the addition of 0.1% of cadmium to improvevthe fluidity of the alloy, relatively low melting points alloys of bismuth, tin, lead and cadmium, such as those enumerated under the heading Fusible metals in the book, Campbells List of Alloys, 1930, page 52.
  • Lead may be employed where a temperature of 327 is desired.
  • An alloy of 30% lead and 70% tin may be used where a temperature of 183 C. is employed.
  • the fusible alloys set forth on page 555 of the Handbook of Chemistry, by Lange, 1934; or on pag 488 of Product Engineering," volume (Nov. 1939) may be used. It will be understood that the fusible or like material is selected which has a melting or transformation temperature corresponding to that which it is desiredto maintain in the injection molding machine heating chamber.
  • the fusible orlike material is placed in a jacket surrounding the heating chamber.
  • This jacket is provided with heating means of the usual type which has been heretofore employed directly around the heating chamber.
  • This heating means may take the form of electrical resistance elements, or heating passageways throughwhich a heated fluid such as hot oil is directed. Since the purpose of the present invention is to avoid the fluctuation in temperature of a heated fluid, it is usually preferred to employ anelectric'heating. element at this point, the electric heating.
  • a suitable rheostat or other controlling means e.g., a pyrometer which is adapted to indicateand control the temperature of the fusible or like material may be used.
  • thermostatic means operating in response to the temperature of the bath material or to the temperature in the heating chamber, whereby the electric heating element is automatically energize or de-energized to maintain the proper temperature and to compensate for the abstraction of heat from the heating chamber by the varied and non-uniform amounts of plastic material passed through the heating chamber.
  • 1- may provide suitable means for preventing the electric heating element from heating the moltenmetal or the like above itsfusion or transition point and for similarly preventing the moiten metal from dropping below its melting point, thus insuring that a mixture of solid and moltenmetal is at all times present.
  • this mixture should be insuch a state that the application of only a small amount of heat will convert it entirely to a molten form,
  • the metal may be allowed to rise above'its melting point slightly, since the specific heatof the metal will usually be very'smallcompared to the latent heat of fusion and, therefore, the passage of plastic through the heating chamber would soon lower the temperature to the melting point without doing undue damage.
  • the means for insuring that the metal or the like remains at the fusion or transition point may take any suitable form. For example, it might comprise a small portion of the fusible metal separated from the main body of the metal and adapted to more readily respond to the abstraction of heat by the passage of plastic through-the heating chamber. A pyrometer or thermostat is.
  • This means may take any other form of device for maintaining a fusible material at the stage where it comprises both the solid and the fused material in intermixture and preferably at the point where almost all of the solid material has been converted to the molten form.
  • the degree of temperature control over the plastic material passing through the heating chamber is very accurate, the injection temperature of the plastic being maintained constant at the melting point of the heating material.
  • the temperature of the material at the instant of injection is maintained below the critical temperature of the material and can be maintained sufficiently accurate that the plastic material is injected while still in the granular state.
  • the temperature of the material is then elevated while in the mold to bring the same to a fluent condition, at which time the chemical change of the plastic occurs causing setting thereof.
  • reference numeral I designates the injection cylinder of an injection molding machine, in which reciprocates the injection plunger 2.
  • the injection cylinder is provided with a screwed-in injection nozzle 3 and with a material spreader or torpedo 4, and is adapted to inject granular or fluent material into the mold cavity 5 formed by the cooperating mold halves 6 and I, mold half I being stationary and mold half 6 bein clamped thereto by means of the hydraulic motor 8.
  • an electrical heating element I I Surrounding the jacket 9 and in intimate contact therewith is an electrical heating element I I around which is disposed the heat insulating material I3.
  • the electrical current is supplied to the heating element II by the power lines I4 and I5, a rheostat I 6 being interposed, if desired, in the lead I5.
  • the temperature to which the metal I0 is heated and the application of electric current to heating element Il may be indicated and controlled by the instrument I! having the heat sensitive element l8 disposed at a suitable point in the bath material.
  • the instrument I1 is an ordinary commercially available indicator and thermostatic control and is adapted to maintain the temperature of the metal I I] at the temperature to which instrument I! is adjusted.
  • the mold halves G and I are cored and are adapted to have a heated liquid circulated therethrough by means of inlet pipe I9 and outlet pipe 29.
  • the mold halves B and 1 When operating with thermoplastic materials, the mold halves B and 1 may be maintained at a temperature below the setting point of the plastic.
  • thermosetting materials When operating with thermosetting materials, they may be maintained at a temperature above the critical temperature of the resin and will thus cause the resin to assume its infusible form after the expiration of the necessary interval.
  • FIG. 2 of the drawings the general arrangement is similar to that of Fig. 1 except that a series of separate zones for heating are employed, a fusible or like material being used in each zone which has a melting or phase conversion point corresponding to a temperature desired to be maintained in that zone.
  • the zones Illa, "lb and lllc are separated by partitions 2
  • the individual heating elements Ila, llb and He may be controlled manually, if desired, by the variable resistance l6a, I61) and IE0, electric current being supplied as before by lines I4 and I5. It is preferable, however, to control the application of current to the heating elements by means of the control instruments I'la, Nb and He, as before.
  • the materials Illa, I02) and IOc for the baths are selected with a view to having their melting or phase conversion points correspond to the temperatures to be maintained in the zones of the injection cylinder, or the temperatures maintained in the baths may be selected with a view to obtaining the desired heat transfer.
  • thermo-setting materials When injecting thermo-setting materials with the arrangement of Figure 2, the mold halves 6 and I are heated to a temperature above the critical temperature of the resin by means of electric heating elements 22 or by the circulation of a heated fluid as in Figure 1,
  • a rod-like commercially available heating element may be spirally wound around the injection cylinder I within the material of the bath.
  • An example of such a heater is the ordinary commercially available Calrod immersion heater manufactured by the General Electric Company.
  • the use of a bath II] eliminates the necessity for a circulating pump for circulating the heated material heretofore employed and prevents local overheating of portions of the injection cylinder. In addition, it enables the maintenance of an exactly predetermined temperature of the bath and a corresponding temperature of the plastic material. Where the materials employed for the bath are good heat conductors, such as molten metal or fused salts, a better contact is obtained With the wall of the injection cylinder and with the surface of the heating element, thereby resulting in faster and more uniform heating of the plastic.
  • .1 may use induced heat, arranging the bath to act as the low tension winding of a transformer and effecting heating in- "7 ductivcly with eddy currents of high frequency.
  • I may use molten metals or fused salts
  • I may use the transformation temperatures of crystalline hydrates, such as, for example, copper sulphate at 110 0., barium chloride at 100 C., barium hydroxide at 78 0., sodium sulphate at 32 0., manganese chloride at 58 C., trlsodium phosphate at .73 0., sodium bromide at '51 0., sodium carbonate at 35 C.
  • the plastic may not attain the temperature of the jacket, but may stay below the temperature of the jacket, the temperature difference being determinedby the particular plastic, the particular speed of operation, and the particular die employed, the temperature of the jacket being predetermined by experiments conducted before the actual injection process, and once having been determined, being maintained at the temperature of change of phase as long as the particular conditions are utilized.
  • I may, under certain circumstances carry it above the fusing point and use an ordinary thermostatic control to maintain it at approximately the desired temperature.
  • I may operate with this alloy maintained at a temperature of substantially 100 C., or higher, if desired.
  • the general construction is the same as that heretofore described, except that a spiral rod-like heating element 23 is wound around the injection cylinder I and is within the material of the bath, and this heating element is controlled by the state of the material of the bath.
  • the bath material 24 is carried within a suitable jacket 25 surrounded by heat insulation 26.
  • the material of the bath is such that it will not conduct electricity when solid but will conduct electricity upon the change of phase, such as upon becoming molten.
  • the bath material may be a fused salt such as the salts enumerated above, the salt being selected which has the desired melting point and electrical conducting properties when molten and when solid.
  • I may, under certain circumstances, employ a crystalline hydrate at the temperature at which-it loses water. In such case, the material below the transition temperature will not conduct electricity but above the transition temperature will conduct electricity.
  • I provide a pair of electrical contacts 21 which are adapted to be electrically connected when the bath material therebetween becomes molten and to thereby allow electrical current to flow through the secondary of transformer 29 and through the winding .28 of solenoid 30, thereby opening switch 3
  • the contacts 21 are Well removed from the heater element 23 so that a large portion of bath mathe melting point of the bath material.
  • terial 24 is in molten form before the circuit is established across contacts 21. In this way, a large reserve of latent heat of fusion is available for heating the plastic in the injection cylinder.
  • When switch 3
  • the bath itself being employed to control the application of electrical energy and thereby to maintain the bath at the temperature of conversion and at a point where the major portion of the bath is in the converted state.
  • FIG 4 there is shown an apparatus where in the same general arrangement is employed as in Figure 3, except that the necessity for employing a material which is an electrical conductor when converted but a non-conductor when in the solid state, is eliminated, and wherein a different method of maintaining the bath at the temperature of conversion is employed.
  • a molten metal bath may be employed as well as any of the materials which would besuitable for use in the apparatus of Figure 3.
  • the bath is divided into two portions, a main portion 3:3 and a relatively small control portion 34 which is disposed around a rear portion of injection cylinder I, these portions 33 and 34 being separated-by a. partition 35.
  • a heater element 23 is employed as in Fig. 3, with the major portion thereof disposed in the main portion.
  • a thermostat 35 is provided having a sensitive element 3'! disposed in the control bath 34 at a considerable distance from the heating element 23, and this thermostat 35 is adapted to actuate a snap switch 38 disposed in one of the incoming power lines 32 and to thereby cut off the application of heat to heater 23 when a predetermined temperature in the control bath 34 has been reached.
  • thermostat 36 is responsive to temperature changes of the-order of 3 or 4F.
  • Thermostat 36 is adjusted so as to maintain the temperature in control portion 34- at 3 or 4 above
  • thermostat 36 is accurate to within 3 plusonminusgit may be set to operate at a temperature of say 4 above the melting point of the bath material. Due to the fact that thermostat 36is setttooperate at a temperature slightly above the melting point andto the fact that the proportionate heat applied to the control porion 34 is greater than that to the main portion 33, the
  • the bath comprises material which expands upon becoming molten, such as suitable known metals having this characteristic, and this expansion isemployed to break the circuit to the electric heating element when the entire body of metal or the like has become molten.
  • the bath material as is heated by electrical heating element ll which is generally of the type described in. co-pending application of I. B. Lawyer, Serial No. 231,637, filed September 26, 1938, and is adapted to cause convection circulation of the material of the bath and to thereby eliminate local overheating.
  • a plunger 42 which is normally spring pressed inwardly and which operates within a cylinder 43 mounted in the wall of the jacket.
  • plunger 42 When plunger 42 moves outwardly due to the expansion of the metal or the like, it opens a snap switch 44 disposed in one of the power lines 32 leading to the heater 4
  • an expansion space 39 is provided above the bath to allow for expansion thereof upon heating, and in the disclosure of Fig. 3 the expansion of the heating material can make or break electric circuit through the contacts 21, upon a rise or fall of the level of the material.
  • the process may be carried out by heating the granular or powdered thermo-setting plastic in the injection cylinder to a suitable low temperature at which it retains its granular form, and injecting it under pressure into the mold while it retains its granular form, the temperature to which the mold is heated and the pressure to which the granular material is subjected by the injection plunger after it is in the mold, being sufiiciently high to cause the material to flow into a homogeneous form and to subsequently set.
  • the mold is heated sufficiently and the injection pressure exerted on the granular plastic in the mold is such as to cause the granular material in the mold to fiow to take the shape of the article after which the mold cools or is cooled to harden the article.
  • the granular thermo-setting plastic may be preheated in the injection cylinder to a temperature at which it is sufliciently soft'to be injected (say to C.) under the usual injection pressures and then injected into the mold while it retains its unreacted state, the mold being heated as before to a temperature above the critical temperature of the resin and supplied with sufficient heat at the temperature to set the article.
  • the process of injection molding which comprises heating granular plastic in an injection chamber to a relatively low temperature to heat the same but to retain its granular form, and injecting it in granular form into a hot mold to prevent any substantial reduction in temperature in the transfer from the injection chamber to the mold, the mold being heated'sufliciently and the injection pressure applied on the material in the mold being suflicient to cause the granular injectecl material to rapidly plasticize and flow into a homogeneous article taking the form of the mold.
  • thermosetting plastic in an injection chamber to a relatively low temperature to retain its granular unreacted form, injecting it in granular form into a hot mold, the mold being heated sufficiently and the injection pressure applied on the material in the mold being sufficient to cause the granular injected material to plasticize and flow into a homogeneous article taking the form of the mold, and to elevate the temperature of the granular material within the mold to reaction temperature for permanently setting the same.
  • the process of injection molding which comprises heating a granular plastic in an injection chamber to a controlled low temperature at which it retains its granular form, of injecting the heated material while in granular form and at the low temperature into a hot mold that is at a temperature substantially above the temperature zasee of the plastic material torapidly elevate the temperature of the plastic to that of the mold whereby to plasticize the same, and of causing the plasticized material to set;

Description

July 15, 1947. K Re. 22,899
INJECTION MOLDING GRANULAR MATERIALS I 2 Sheets-Sheet Original Filed Dec. 18, 1939 vEl 1 H! I I? m i low-uh:
n! wamau R. TucKeR aw/ Lam;
y 15, 1947. w. R. TUCKER INJECTION MOLDING AGVRANULAR "MATERIALS Original Filed Dec. 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Imhntor wanna R. TuuuLR A item we Reissued July 15, 1947 INJECTION MOLDING GRANULAR MATERIALS Warren R. Tucker, Dayton, Ohio, assignor to The Hydraulic Development Corp. Inc., Wilmington, Del., a corporation of Delaware Original No. 2,359,013, dated September 26, 1944, Serial No. 388,477, April 14, 1941, which is a division of Serial No. 309,797, December 18,
1939. Serial No. 588,442
9 Claims.
This invention relates to a method of injection molding in which the temperature of the plastic material is more accurately controlled. The invention may be used in the injection molding of either thermosetting or thermoplastic resins, but is particularly adaptable to the molding of thermosetting materials.
Heretofore, it has been more or less common to heat the material in the injection cylinder by electric heating means, or the circulation of a heated fluid around the injection cylinder, whereby the granular non-fluent material is gradually heated up to the injectable state before it reaches the injection nozzle and in this fluent state is injected into the mold cavity. A popular practice has been to heat the injection cylinder with induction heat and to control the temperature of the cylinder wall by a suitable thermostat. This method is disadvantageous since it is impossible to impart an absolutely uniform temperature to the cylinder wall as this temperature fluctuates as much as 4 or 5. The result is that the temperature of the fluent material injected into the mold fluctuates several degrees. This is disadvantageous since the temperature of fluency of the commonly employed plastic material is very critical.
My invention substantially eliminates fluctuation in the temperature of the injected material. This constancy of temperature is especially important in the case of thermosetting materials because, if they are heated above a certain critical temperature for any sustained length of time, an irreversible reaction takes place, reducing their capability of being rendered fluent and injectable. M invention overcomes these disadvantages of the prior art; practices by providing a uniform temperature in the injection cylinder. While the invention relates particularly to the maintenance of a uniform temperature in the injection cylinder of an injection molding machine, the principles thereof may, if desired, be applied in the maintenance of a uniform temperature in other portions of the injection molding machine, such as in a preheating chamber or in the mold halves.
The principal object of the invention is to hold the temperature in a portion of the injection molding machine at a uniform and constant level at which the material will be injected or will be rendered or maintained fluent.
Another object of the invention is to maintain the temperature of a thermosetting resin uniformly at a point below the critical temperature of the resin, and to inject the resin into a mold Application for reissue April 16, 1945,
2 in which it is raised to or above the critical setting point of the resin.
Still another object is to provide a progressively increasing temperature in a portion of the injection molding machine whereby the temperature in different stages is completely uniform and is progressively increased as the plastic moves forward towards the mold.
Still other objects will more fully hereinafter appear.
This application is a division of my copending application, Serial No. 309,797, filed December 18, 1939. s
In the accompanying drawings:
Figure 1 is a vertical sectional view of one form of an apparatus embodying the principles of the present invention.
Figure 2 is a similar view of another form of apparatus embodying the principles of the present invention and in which the temperature of the injection cylinder is progressively increased to a point below the critical setting point of the plastic, and is then injected into the mold in which it is raised to a point above the critical setting point.
Figure 3 is a similar view of another form of apparatus embodyin the principles of the present invention and in which the fusion bath is electrically heated by a spiral immersion heater disposed in the bath, the bath being composed of a material which is a non-conductor of electricity when solid and a conductor of electricity when molten, electrical contacts being disposed in the bath and operative to maintain the bath at the melting point by maintaining a mixture of molten and solid bath material in intimate contact with one another; the electrical control mechanism is shown diagrammatically.
Figure 4 is a similar View but showing another method of maintaining the bath material at the temperature at which change of phase from the solid state occurs; in this form of the invention the bath material is formed into two zones, the minor zone being disposed around the rear portion of the injection cylinder and being maintained at a temperature slightly above the melting point or temperature of change of phase, and the main body of the bath material being maintained at the melting point and near the point wher it is all molten; the control portion of the bath at the rear thermostatically controls the application of heat to the whole body of fusion material or the like.
Figure 5 is a transverse vertical section through an injection cylinder equipp d With a fusion bath.
and with still other means for maintaining the bath at the melting point; in this view, the expansion of. the fusion materialupon attaining the molten state is utilized to control the application of electrical energy to the heating element in the bath; the heating element is shown formed and disposed in such manner as to promote circulation of the bath material.
My invention involves the utilization of a bath of normally solid material at a change of phase in a jacket surrounding the portion of the injection machine to be heated as an accurate means for controlling the temperature in that portion of the injection molding machine, As the fusionmaterial for the bath, I may use metals having a melting point corresponding substantially. to the temperature to be maintained in the portion of the machine in question. However, I may use other materials than metals which have a constant or fixed melting point and which are adapted to be held at the melting point for prolonged periods of time and which may be melted and solidified indefinitely. As an example of such other materials, I may use pure metals, chemical-compounds and eutectic mixtures, all of which melt and freeze at a constant temperature. For example, I may use sulphur, naphthalene, benzophenone, and certain salts which have the desired melting point such as, for example, potassium nitrate having a melting point of 337 C., a 45-55 mixture of sodium nitrate and potassium nitrate, which has a melting point of 218 C or a 55-45 mixture of sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite which has a melting point of 221 C. As an example of still other materials which may be employed, I may. under certain circumstances make use of the transition or cryohydric points of crystalline hydrates, where this transformation temperature is sufiiciently high, this being another example of control materials having nonvariant points and comprising a solid and a liquid, in admixture at the transition temperature. As examples of suitable alloys which may be employed', there may be mentioned an alloy consisting of equal weights of lead and tin, preferably with the addition of 0.1% of cadmium to improvevthe fluidity of the alloy, relatively low melting points alloys of bismuth, tin, lead and cadmium, such as those enumerated under the heading Fusible metals in the book, Campbells List of Alloys, 1930, page 52. Lead may be employed where a temperature of 327 is desired. An alloy of 30% lead and 70% tin may be used where a temperature of 183 C. is employed. In addition to the foregoing alloys, the fusible alloys set forth on page 555 of the Handbook of Chemistry, by Lange, 1934; or on pag 488 of Product Engineering," volume (Nov. 1939) may be used. It will be understood that the fusible or like material is selected which has a melting or transformation temperature corresponding to that which it is desiredto maintain in the injection molding machine heating chamber.
The fusible orlike material is placed in a jacket surrounding the heating chamber. This jacket is provided with heating means of the usual type which has been heretofore employed directly around the heating chamber. This heating means; may take the form of electrical resistance elements, or heating passageways throughwhich a heated fluid such as hot oil is directed. Since the purpose of the present invention is to avoid the fluctuation in temperature of a heated fluid, it is usually preferred to employ anelectric'heating. element at this point, the electric heating.
element being controlled by a suitable rheostat or other controlling means. If desired, a pyrometer which is adapted to indicateand control the temperature of the fusible or like material may be used. There may be provided thermostatic means operating in response to the temperature of the bath material or to the temperature in the heating chamber, whereby the electric heating element is automatically energize or de-energized to maintain the proper temperature and to compensate for the abstraction of heat from the heating chamber by the varied and non-uniform amounts of plastic material passed through the heating chamber.
By reason of the provision of a relatively large quantity of fusible or like material which is maintained at its melting point and which ordinarily has a high latent heat of fusion, the passage of material through the heating chamber does not ordinarily abstract suflicient heat from this body of fusible material to lower it below its melting point. In this way the temperature of the molten metal or the like does not drop and, correspondingly, the temperature of the wall of the injection cylinder and the temperature to which the plastic is heated, remains constant despite the abstraction of heat by the granular plastic. The large volume of melted metal or the like at its melting point acts as a large reserve of heat from which heat may be abstracted. intermittently Without fluctuation in the actual temperature, advantage being taken of the phenomenon that the temperature of melting or of transition remains constant as long as the solid and the liquid phase are in intermixture. In this way, the present invention enables a reduction in fluctuation of temperature in the heating chamber to a negligible If desired, 1- may provide suitable means for preventing the electric heating element from heating the moltenmetal or the like above itsfusion or transition point and for similarly preventing the moiten metal from dropping below its melting point, thus insuring that a mixture of solid and moltenmetal is at all times present. Preferably, this mixture should be insuch a state that the application of only a small amount of heat will convert it entirely to a molten form,
thereby providing the maximum reserve of heat in the metal without allowing it to rise above the melting point. However, under certain circumstances, the metal may be allowed to rise above'its melting point slightly, since the specific heatof the metal will usually be very'smallcompared to the latent heat of fusion and, therefore, the passage of plastic through the heating chamber would soon lower the temperature to the melting point without doing undue damage. The means for insuring that the metal or the like remains at the fusion or transition point may take any suitable form. For example, it might comprise a small portion of the fusible metal separated from the main body of the metal and adapted to more readily respond to the abstraction of heat by the passage of plastic through-the heating chamber. A pyrometer or thermostat is. connected to this separate portion in such manner that either the operator may manually or the thermostat may automatically apply the electric current to the heating element tov an extent directly proporional to the drop initemperature of the separate portion of fusible metal, thereby preventing the temperature of the main body of fusible metal from dropping below the melting point. This means may take any other form of device for maintaining a fusible material at the stage where it comprises both the solid and the fused material in intermixture and preferably at the point where almost all of the solid material has been converted to the molten form.
When using molten materials in the manner heretofore described the degree of temperature control over the plastic material passing through the heating chamber is very accurate, the injection temperature of the plastic being maintained constant at the melting point of the heating material. In the case of thermosetting resins the temperature of the material at the instant of injection is maintained below the critical temperature of the material and can be maintained sufficiently accurate that the plastic material is injected while still in the granular state. The temperature of the material is then elevated while in the mold to bring the same to a fluent condition, at which time the chemical change of the plastic occurs causing setting thereof.
The accompanying drawings portray several methods of carrying out the invention. Referring first to Figure 1, reference numeral I designates the injection cylinder of an injection molding machine, in which reciprocates the injection plunger 2. The injection cylinder is provided with a screwed-in injection nozzle 3 and with a material spreader or torpedo 4, and is adapted to inject granular or fluent material into the mold cavity 5 formed by the cooperating mold halves 6 and I, mold half I being stationary and mold half 6 bein clamped thereto by means of the hydraulic motor 8. Surrounding the injection cylinder l is a jacket 9 of any suitable type adapted to retain the molten metal or the like and preferably constructed with a highly heat conductive cylindrical wall in order that the heat of the heating element may be readily transferred to the metal II) or the like interposed between the jacket 9 and the exterior of the injection cylinder I. Surrounding the jacket 9 and in intimate contact therewith is an electrical heating element I I around which is disposed the heat insulating material I3. The electrical current is supplied to the heating element II by the power lines I4 and I5, a rheostat I 6 being interposed, if desired, in the lead I5. The temperature to which the metal I0 is heated and the application of electric current to heating element Il may be indicated and controlled by the instrument I! having the heat sensitive element l8 disposed at a suitable point in the bath material. The instrument I1 is an ordinary commercially available indicator and thermostatic control and is adapted to maintain the temperature of the metal I I] at the temperature to which instrument I! is adjusted.
In Figure 1, the mold halves G and I are cored and are adapted to have a heated liquid circulated therethrough by means of inlet pipe I9 and outlet pipe 29. When operating with thermoplastic materials, the mold halves B and 1 may be maintained at a temperature below the setting point of the plastic. When operating with thermosetting materials, they may be maintained at a temperature above the critical temperature of the resin and will thus cause the resin to assume its infusible form after the expiration of the necessary interval.
In Figure 2 of the drawings, the general arrangement is similar to that of Fig. 1 except that a series of separate zones for heating are employed, a fusible or like material being used in each zone which has a melting or phase conversion point corresponding to a temperature desired to be maintained in that zone. The zones Illa, "lb and lllc are separated by partitions 2|. The individual heating elements Ila, llb and He may be controlled manually, if desired, by the variable resistance l6a, I61) and IE0, electric current being supplied as before by lines I4 and I5. It is preferable, however, to control the application of current to the heating elements by means of the control instruments I'la, Nb and He, as before. The materials Illa, I02) and IOc for the baths are selected with a view to having their melting or phase conversion points correspond to the temperatures to be maintained in the zones of the injection cylinder, or the temperatures maintained in the baths may be selected with a view to obtaining the desired heat transfer. For example, it may be desired to maintain around zone A a relatively low temperature in order to prevent softening of the plastic in this zone, a, somewhat higher temperature around zone B in order to begin the softening of the plastic, and a still higher temperature around thejorwardmost zone C so as to render the plastic completely fluent, this last temperature being, however, below the critical setting point of the thermo-setting resin being injected. Or it might be desirable to use a high temperature around zone A in order to obtain very rapid transfer of heat to the plastic material and to use a relatively low temperature around zones B and C in order to convert the material to fluent form but to prevent burning of the material, the temperature in the final zone C being optionally just under the critical setting point of the resin to maintain the resin fluent or to maintain the temperature of the resin just below the point of fluency to permit the same to be injected into the mold in a granular state. When injecting thermo-setting materials with the arrangement of Figure 2, the mold halves 6 and I are heated to a temperature above the critical temperature of the resin by means of electric heating elements 22 or by the circulation of a heated fluid as in Figure 1,
Instead of surrounding the fusion bath with the electric heating element as shown in Figs. 1 and 2, a rod-like commercially available heating element may be spirally wound around the injection cylinder I within the material of the bath. An example of such a heater is the ordinary commercially available Calrod immersion heater manufactured by the General Electric Company. By using such an immersion heater, particularly in conjunction with the use of a metal as the bath material, a perfect contact is obtained between the heater and the bath, whereby heat losses are minimized and rapid heating is assured.
It will be seen from the foregoing that the use ofa bath II] eliminates the necessity for a circulating pump for circulating the heated material heretofore employed and prevents local overheating of portions of the injection cylinder. In addition, it enables the maintenance of an exactly predetermined temperature of the bath and a corresponding temperature of the plastic material. Where the materials employed for the bath are good heat conductors, such as molten metal or fused salts, a better contact is obtained With the wall of the injection cylinder and with the surface of the heating element, thereby resulting in faster and more uniform heating of the plastic. Instead of using conducted heat for heating the bath, .1 may use induced heat, arranging the bath to act as the low tension winding of a transformer and effecting heating in- "7 ductivcly with eddy currents of high frequency. For the higher temperature'ranges, I may use molten metals or fused salts, whereas for the lower temperature ranges, I may use the transformation temperatures of crystalline hydrates, such as, for example, copper sulphate at 110 0., barium chloride at 100 C., barium hydroxide at 78 0., sodium sulphate at 32 0., manganese chloride at 58 C., trlsodium phosphate at .73 0., sodium bromide at '51 0., sodium carbonate at 35 C. and sodium thiosulphate at 48 C. It will be understood that the plastic may not attain the temperature of the jacket, but may stay below the temperature of the jacket, the temperature difference being determinedby the particular plastic, the particular speed of operation, and the particular die employed, the temperature of the jacket being predetermined by experiments conducted before the actual injection process, and once having been determined, being maintained at the temperature of change of phase as long as the particular conditions are utilized.
Instead of maintaining the temperature at the change of phase in the case of fusible materials, I may, under certain circumstances carry it above the fusing point and use an ordinary thermostatic control to maintain it at approximately the desired temperature. For example, in the case of an alloy melting at 90 C., I may operate with this alloy maintained at a temperature of substantially 100 C., or higher, if desired. In such a case, I prefer to use a highly heat conductive material for the bath, such as metal or fused salt in order to attain the advantages of better heat conduction thereby as compared with the hot oil which has been heretofore commonly employed.
Referring now to the modification shown in Figure 3, the general construction is the same as that heretofore described, except that a spiral rod-like heating element 23 is wound around the injection cylinder I and is within the material of the bath, and this heating element is controlled by the state of the material of the bath. The bath material 24 is carried within a suitable jacket 25 surrounded by heat insulation 26. The material of the bath is such that it will not conduct electricity when solid but will conduct electricity upon the change of phase, such as upon becoming molten. For example, the bath material may be a fused salt such as the salts enumerated above, the salt being selected which has the desired melting point and electrical conducting properties when molten and when solid. Instead of using a fused bath, I may, under certain circumstances, employ a crystalline hydrate at the temperature at which-it loses water. In such case, the material below the transition temperature will not conduct electricity but above the transition temperature will conduct electricity. In order to insure that the bath material 24 is maintained at the melting point or the like, I provide a pair of electrical contacts 21 which are adapted to be electrically connected when the bath material therebetween becomes molten and to thereby allow electrical current to flow through the secondary of transformer 29 and through the winding .28 of solenoid 30, thereby opening switch 3| and opening the electrical circuit to heating element 23 which is normally established by reason of a spring normal- 1y holding switch 3[ in closed Position, the incoming power lines being designated as 32. The contacts 21 are Well removed from the heater element 23 so that a large portion of bath mathe melting point of the bath material.
terial 24 is in molten form before the circuit is established across contacts 21. In this way, a large reserve of latent heat of fusion is available for heating the plastic in the injection cylinder. When switch 3| is opened, the supply of electricity to heater element 23 is cut off and solidification of the bath material in the region of contacts 2'! may occur by reason of the loss of heat from the bath by radiation or by extraction thereof by the plastic material. By using the apparatus of Fig. 3, the necessity for using an expensive thermostat is eliminated, the bath itself being employed to control the application of electrical energy and thereby to maintain the bath at the temperature of conversion and at a point where the major portion of the bath is in the converted state.
In Figure 4 there is shown an apparatus where in the same general arrangement is employed as in Figure 3, except that the necessity for employing a material which is an electrical conductor when converted but a non-conductor when in the solid state, is eliminated, and wherein a different method of maintaining the bath at the temperature of conversion is employed. In this embodiment, a molten metal bath may be employed as well as any of the materials which would besuitable for use in the apparatus of Figure 3. The bath is divided into two portions, a main portion 3:3 and a relatively small control portion 34 which is disposed around a rear portion of injection cylinder I, these portions 33 and 34 being separated-by a. partition 35. A heater element 23 is employed as in Fig. 3, with the major portion thereof disposed in the main portion. 33 of the bath and with a proportionately larger por tion in the control section'34. For example, there is illustrated the use of one and one-half turns of the-spiral heating element in control section 34, whereas-the spacing of the turns in the main portion 33 is such that-only one turn is used in a portionof bath 33ccrresponding in length and size to control'bath 34. A thermostat 35 is provided having a sensitive element 3'! disposed in the control bath 34 at a considerable distance from the heating element 23, and this thermostat 35 is adapted to actuate a snap switch 38 disposed in one of the incoming power lines 32 and to thereby cut off the application of heat to heater 23 when a predetermined temperature in the control bath 34 has been reached. Thermostat 35 need not be-extremely sensitive and, therefore, needgnot be unduly expensive, it being satisfactory if thermostat 36 is responsive to temperature changes of the-order of 3 or 4F. Thermostat 36 is adjusted so as to maintain the temperature in control portion 34- at 3 or 4 above For example, if thermostat 36 is accurate to within 3 plusonminusgit may be set to operate at a temperature of say 4 above the melting point of the bath material. Due to the fact that thermostat 36is setttooperate at a temperature slightly above the melting point andto the fact that the proportionate heat applied to the control porion 34 is greater than that to the main portion 33, the
result will bethat the main bath. 33 will be maintainedat the melting temperature and at a'point where ,it is practically all in the molten or converted form. The maintenance of control bath 34 at a higher temperatureis not harmful because the plastic at .the rear of the injection cylinder is granular and is not capable of being injured by the excessive temperatureat this point, although the subjection of the fluent plastic to such a temperature might convert it to the infusible form. From the foregoing, it will be seen that the arrangement of Fig. 4 provides a simple and inexpensive means of maintaining the main body of the bath at the conversion temperature. Referring to the modification shown in Fig. 5, the bath comprises material which expands upon becoming molten, such as suitable known metals having this characteristic, and this expansion isemployed to break the circuit to the electric heating element when the entire body of metal or the like has become molten. The bath material as is heated by electrical heating element ll which is generally of the type described in. co-pending application of I. B. Lawyer, Serial No. 231,637, filed September 26, 1938, and is adapted to cause convection circulation of the material of the bath and to thereby eliminate local overheating. As the material of thebath becomes molten, it urges outwardly a plunger 42 which is normally spring pressed inwardly and which operates within a cylinder 43 mounted in the wall of the jacket. When plunger 42 moves outwardly due to the expansion of the metal or the like, it opens a snap switch 44 disposed in one of the power lines 32 leading to the heater 4|, cutting off the supply of electrical current and allowing the bath 4!! to remain at its molten. temperature and preventing it from being heated above the temperature of melting. As heat is abstracted from bath 4!], the bath shrinks and plunger 42 is spring-pressed inwardly, causing snap switch 44 to close, thus again energizing heater 4! and causing the temperature of the bath 40 to rise. By disposing the plunger 42 at the top of the bath and at a point well removed from heater element 4i, it is insured that a large portion of the bath 4B is in molten form before the electric current is cut ofi to heater 4|. Thus, by taking advantage of the property of the bath material of expanding upon change of state to the molten form, I am enabled to maintain the temperature of the bath at the melting point and near that point where it is all molten but without raising its temperature above the melting point, without the use of an expensive thermostat.
In Figures 3 and 4, an expansion space 39 is provided above the bath to allow for expansion thereof upon heating, and in the disclosure of Fig. 3 the expansion of the heating material can make or break electric circuit through the contacts 21, upon a rise or fall of the level of the material.
From the foregoing description, it will be seen that I have devised an inexpensive and effective method and apparatus for heating a plasti to a constant temperature using the latent heat of a heating material, this method and apparatus being particularly applicable to the injection molding of thermo-setting materials which are exceedingly susceptible to small increases in temperature over a critical temperature, although the invention may equally be applied to thermoplastic materials Where constant conditions of operation are desired. These results are accomplished in a preferred form by the maintenance of a bath in direct heat conducting relationship with the injection cylinder, this bath being maintained at the constant temperature at which it undergoes a change of phase from the solid state. I consider that invention resides not only in the method and apparatus for injection molding, but also in the particular controlling means of Fig. 3, for example. It will be seen that I have devised mechanism which not only maintains the bath material at the temperature of change of phase, but which maintains it at a point where the change of phase is almost entirely complete, so that the large reserve of latent heat attendant upon extensive change of phase is available at a constant temperature to heat the plastic.
The process may be carried out by heating the granular or powdered thermo-setting plastic in the injection cylinder to a suitable low temperature at which it retains its granular form, and injecting it under pressure into the mold while it retains its granular form, the temperature to which the mold is heated and the pressure to which the granular material is subjected by the injection plunger after it is in the mold, being sufiiciently high to cause the material to flow into a homogeneous form and to subsequently set. In the case of granular thermoplastic materials the mold is heated sufficiently and the injection pressure exerted on the granular plastic in the mold is such as to cause the granular material in the mold to fiow to take the shape of the article after which the mold cools or is cooled to harden the article.
The granular thermo-setting plastic may be preheated in the injection cylinder to a temperature at which it is sufliciently soft'to be injected (say to C.) under the usual injection pressures and then injected into the mold while it retains its unreacted state, the mold being heated as before to a temperature above the critical temperature of the resin and supplied with sufficient heat at the temperature to set the article.
I wish it to be understood that I intend to include as within my invention such modifications and adaptations'thereof a may be necessary to make it suitable for varying conditions and uses and as fall within the scope of the appended claims.
Having thus full described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
l. The process of injection molding which comprises heating granular plastic in an injection chamber to a relatively low temperature to heat the same but to retain its granular form, and injecting it in granular form into a hot mold to prevent any substantial reduction in temperature in the transfer from the injection chamber to the mold, the mold being heated'sufliciently and the injection pressure applied on the material in the mold being suflicient to cause the granular injectecl material to rapidly plasticize and flow into a homogeneous article taking the form of the mold.
2. The process of injection molding which comprises heating granular unreacted thermosetting plastic in an injection chamber to a relatively low temperature to retain its granular unreacted form, injecting it in granular form into a hot mold, the mold being heated sufficiently and the injection pressure applied on the material in the mold being sufficient to cause the granular injected material to plasticize and flow into a homogeneous article taking the form of the mold, and to elevate the temperature of the granular material within the mold to reaction temperature for permanently setting the same.
3. The process of injection molding Which comprises heating a granular plastic in an injection chamber to a controlled low temperature at which it retains its granular form, of injecting the heated material while in granular form and at the low temperature into a hot mold that is at a temperature substantially above the temperature zasee of the plastic material torapidly elevate the temperature of the plastic to that of the mold whereby to plasticize the same, and of causing the plasticized material to set;
4' -T-he"process of injection molding which com= prises elevating the temperature of a granular plastic in an injection chamber to arelatively low temperature at which it retains its granular form by subjecting the plastic to the action-of latent heat de'riveddirectly from a body oficnormally solid material maintained at a temperature at which the material undergoes a change of'phase from the solid state, and injecting the plastic'material in granular form into' a .mold heated to a temperature substantially above the temperature of the granular plastic, themold be'ing'heated sufficiently and the injection pressure ap'plied on the material in the mold being suflicient to cause the granular injected material to plasticlze and flow into a homogeneous article the s'olid'state, and. injecting the'plastic in g'ranular form into a mold heated to a'temperature substantiallyabove the temperature of the granul'a'r plastic; the :mold being heated sufiiciently and'the injection pressure applied on the material'in the mold being 'suflicient'to .cause the granular-injected material to plasticize and'flow. into a homogeneous article taking the form of the mold and to subsequently react. and set to the solid'state; 1 6. The process of injection molding which comprises elevating the temperature era-"granular plasticin a'plurality of independentstages to a maximumt'emperature= {at i which it retains its granularforrm' individually controlling the temperature 50f each of the stages, and :of injecting thepla'stic into amold in granular form at the temperature of thefinal stage. 1
l'Il'ie-process of injection molding which comprisestsequentlally subjecting granular plastic :to
the action of latent heat derived directly from a plurality of normally solid bodies of material maintained at different temperatures and at which the several independent bodies undergo a change in phase from the solid state to elevate the temperature of the granular plastic in a plurality of stages to a maximum temperature at which it retains its granular form, individually controlling the temperature of each of the stages, and of injecting the plastic into a mold in granular form and at the temperature of the final stage.
8. The process of injection molding which com prises heating a zone through which plastic material passes to a'temperature substantially equal to the physical transformation temperature of a heating material when passing from the solid to the liquid state and surrounding the zone, of passing granular plastic material through the zone to elevate the temperature thereof to that of the zone without changing the granular condition of the material, of ejecting the plastic ftomthe zone into a mold in a granular state, and of controlling the temperature of the heating material to maintain the same at said transition temperature thereof to maintain the temperature of the granular plastic constant just prior to ejection.
9. The process of injection molding which com prises initially heating granular plastic to a relatively low temperature to heat the same but to retain its granular form, and injecting it-in gran- REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
I V UNITED STATES PA'IIEINTS Number .Date
Name ,7 2,235,324 Moreland Mar. 18, 1941 1,402,705 Apple Jan. 3, 1922
US22899D Injection molding granular Expired USRE22899E (en)

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Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2578105A (en) * 1947-06-28 1951-12-11 James Y Taylor Die-casting apparatus
US2715326A (en) * 1950-10-14 1955-08-16 Joseph A Gits Dual shell drinking vessels
US2738551A (en) * 1952-04-26 1956-03-20 Glaskyd Inc Transfer molding method
US2770842A (en) * 1954-01-22 1956-11-20 Du Pont Injection molding of polytetrafluoroethylene
US2877501A (en) * 1952-12-24 1959-03-17 Fiberfil Corp Glass-reinforced thermoplastic injection molding compound and injection-molding process employing it
US2889578A (en) * 1956-06-21 1959-06-09 Phillips Petroleum Co Press for consolidation of material under pressure
US2948018A (en) * 1956-08-13 1960-08-09 Hintermann Apparatus for the production of dental plates and the like from plastic material
US2962759A (en) * 1955-02-18 1960-12-06 Maccaferri Mario Heating cylinders for injection molding machines
US3058161A (en) * 1956-02-24 1962-10-16 Dow Chemical Co A method of molding expandable thermoplastic resinous beads
US3200176A (en) * 1959-07-30 1965-08-10 Monsanto Chemicals Process for molding thermoplastic resin articles free of surface defects
US4390485A (en) 1982-01-07 1983-06-28 Yang Wen Jei Method of injection molding a foamed resin product having a smooth surface involving surface heating of the mold by applying high current low voltage electric power

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2578105A (en) * 1947-06-28 1951-12-11 James Y Taylor Die-casting apparatus
US2715326A (en) * 1950-10-14 1955-08-16 Joseph A Gits Dual shell drinking vessels
US2738551A (en) * 1952-04-26 1956-03-20 Glaskyd Inc Transfer molding method
US2877501A (en) * 1952-12-24 1959-03-17 Fiberfil Corp Glass-reinforced thermoplastic injection molding compound and injection-molding process employing it
US2770842A (en) * 1954-01-22 1956-11-20 Du Pont Injection molding of polytetrafluoroethylene
US2962759A (en) * 1955-02-18 1960-12-06 Maccaferri Mario Heating cylinders for injection molding machines
US3058161A (en) * 1956-02-24 1962-10-16 Dow Chemical Co A method of molding expandable thermoplastic resinous beads
US2889578A (en) * 1956-06-21 1959-06-09 Phillips Petroleum Co Press for consolidation of material under pressure
US2948018A (en) * 1956-08-13 1960-08-09 Hintermann Apparatus for the production of dental plates and the like from plastic material
US3200176A (en) * 1959-07-30 1965-08-10 Monsanto Chemicals Process for molding thermoplastic resin articles free of surface defects
US4390485A (en) 1982-01-07 1983-06-28 Yang Wen Jei Method of injection molding a foamed resin product having a smooth surface involving surface heating of the mold by applying high current low voltage electric power

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