Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.

No === Injection moulding techniques have been miniaturised and refined to achieve micromoulding which aims to satisfy the need for mass production of low-cost micro- and nanoscale components. However, the microscale mould cavity features and extreme processing conditions which are inherent in the p...

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Main Authors: Whiteside, Benjamin R., Brown, Elaine C., Ono, Y., Jen, C.K., Coates, Philip D.
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3824
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-38242019-08-31T03:02:15Z Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding. Whiteside, Benjamin R. Brown, Elaine C. Ono, Y. Jen, C.K. Coates, Philip D. Experimental study Thermooxidative degradation Flow velocity Ultrasonic method Process control Mold filling Quality assurance Optimization Piezoelectric sensor Injection molding Polyoxymethylene Monitoring No Injection moulding techniques have been miniaturised and refined to achieve micromoulding which aims to satisfy the need for mass production of low-cost micro- and nanoscale components. However, the microscale mould cavity features and extreme processing conditions which are inherent in the process can result in larger process variations than conventional injection moulding, with a corresponding increase in the probability of producing an unsatisfactory product. Accurate process diagnosis is required to ensure process reliability but integration of sensors onto the small and highly detailed mould units can be problematic and alternatives may need to be sought. Piezoelectric film ultrasonic transducers were integrated onto the extrusion barrel and mould insert of a micromoulding machine for real-time, non-destructive and non-intrusive process diagnosis with an ultrasonic pulse-echo technique. Polymer degradation owing to excessive heating at the extrusion barrel was successfully probed by measuring the ultrasonic velocities in the polymer at the mould insert. Filling incompleteness of the mould cavity was also sensitively detected by monitoring the ultrasonic energy variation transmitted into the part at different points along the melt flow length. The developed ultrasonic sensors and technique enable optimisation and in-process quality assurance of the moulded parts which ensures that maximum process efficiency can be achieved. 2009-11-03T09:00:36Z 2009-11-03T09:00:36Z 2005 Article No full-text available in the repository Whiteside, B.R., Brown, E.C., Ono, Y., Jen, C.K. and Coates, P.D. (2005). Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding. Plastics Rubber and Composites. Vol. 34, No. 9, pp. 387-392. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3824 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/174328905X71977
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Experimental study
Thermooxidative degradation
Flow velocity
Ultrasonic method
Process control
Mold filling
Quality assurance
Optimization
Piezoelectric sensor
Injection molding
Polyoxymethylene
Monitoring
spellingShingle Experimental study
Thermooxidative degradation
Flow velocity
Ultrasonic method
Process control
Mold filling
Quality assurance
Optimization
Piezoelectric sensor
Injection molding
Polyoxymethylene
Monitoring
Whiteside, Benjamin R.
Brown, Elaine C.
Ono, Y.
Jen, C.K.
Coates, Philip D.
Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.
description No === Injection moulding techniques have been miniaturised and refined to achieve micromoulding which aims to satisfy the need for mass production of low-cost micro- and nanoscale components. However, the microscale mould cavity features and extreme processing conditions which are inherent in the process can result in larger process variations than conventional injection moulding, with a corresponding increase in the probability of producing an unsatisfactory product. Accurate process diagnosis is required to ensure process reliability but integration of sensors onto the small and highly detailed mould units can be problematic and alternatives may need to be sought. Piezoelectric film ultrasonic transducers were integrated onto the extrusion barrel and mould insert of a micromoulding machine for real-time, non-destructive and non-intrusive process diagnosis with an ultrasonic pulse-echo technique. Polymer degradation owing to excessive heating at the extrusion barrel was successfully probed by measuring the ultrasonic velocities in the polymer at the mould insert. Filling incompleteness of the mould cavity was also sensitively detected by monitoring the ultrasonic energy variation transmitted into the part at different points along the melt flow length. The developed ultrasonic sensors and technique enable optimisation and in-process quality assurance of the moulded parts which ensures that maximum process efficiency can be achieved.
author Whiteside, Benjamin R.
Brown, Elaine C.
Ono, Y.
Jen, C.K.
Coates, Philip D.
author_facet Whiteside, Benjamin R.
Brown, Elaine C.
Ono, Y.
Jen, C.K.
Coates, Philip D.
author_sort Whiteside, Benjamin R.
title Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.
title_short Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.
title_full Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.
title_fullStr Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.
title_full_unstemmed Real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.
title_sort real-time ultrasonic diagnosis of polymer degradation and filling incompleteness in micromoulding.
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3824
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