Design and Fabrication of Mini Injection Moulding Machine For Thermoplastic Waste
Design and Fabrication of Mini Injection Moulding Machine For Thermoplastic Waste
Design and Fabrication of Mini Injection Moulding Machine For Thermoplastic Waste
ABSTRACT
II
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I
ABSTRACT II
1 INTRODUCTION 1
2 LITERATURE REVIEW 2
4 METHODOLOGY 4
5.1 Plastic 5
5.1.2 Characteristics 8
5.2 Heaters 9
5.3 C-Clamp 10
5.4 Plate 10
5.6 Shafts 11
5.8 Frame 12
5.9 Paints 12
6 DESIGN,CALCULATION,WORKING MODEL
&COST ESTIMATION 13
7.1 Mechanism 16
7.2 Fabrication 16
7.2.1 Marking 17
7.2.2 Cutting 17
7.2.4 Welding 18
7.2.5 Assembly 18
8 DISCUSSIONS 19
8.2 Advantages 19
9 CONCLUSION 20
10 REFERENCES 21
LIST OF TABLES
Thermoplastic Properties 6
Thermosetting properties 7
Specifications 12
Cost Estimation 15
Kg - kilogram
m3 - cubic metre
N - Newton
Π - Pie
III
LIST OF FIGURES
5.1 Plastics 5
5.2 Heaters 9
5.3 C-Clamp 10
5.4 Hollow Rods 10
5.5 Shafts 11
5.6 Nuts and Bolts 11
5.7 Frame 12
6.1 Design 13
6.2 Working Model 14
6.3 Mold 15
IV
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
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CHAPTER 2
LITERATURE REVIEW
American inventor John Wesley Hyatt together with his brother Isaiah, Hyatt
patented the first injection molding machine in 1872. This machine was
relatively simple compared to machines in use today: it worked like a large
hypodermic needle, using a plunger to inject plastic through a heated cylinder
into a mold. The industry progressed slowly over the years, producing products
such as collar stays, buttons, and hair combs.
The German chemists Arthur Eichengrun and Theodore Becker invented the
first soluble forms of cellulose acetate in 1903, which was much less flammable
than cellulose nitrate. It was eventually made available in a powder form from
which it was readily injection molded. Arthur Eichengrun developed the first
injection molding press in 1919. In 1939, Arthur Eichengrun patented the
injection molding of plasticized cellulose acetate.
The industry expanded rapidly in the 1940s because World War II created a
huge demand for inexpensive, mass-produced products. In 1946, American
inventor James Watson Hendry built the first screw injection machine, which
allowed much more precise control over the speed of injection and the quality
of articles produced. This machine also allowed material to be mixed before
injection, so that colored or recycled plastic could be added to virgin material
and mixed thoroughly before being injected. Today screw injection machines
account for the vast majority of all injection machines. In the 1970s, Hendry
went on to develop the first gas-assisted injection molding process, which
permitted the production of complex, hollow articles that cooled quickly. This
greatly improved design flexibility as well as the strength and finish of
manufactured parts while reducing production time, cost, weight and waste.
The plastic injection molding industry has evolved over the years from
producing combs and buttons to producing a vast array of products for many
industries including automotive, medical, aerospace, consumer products, toys,
plumbing, packaging, and construction.
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CHAPTER 3
PROBLEM DEFINITION
A sprue is simply the channel that guides molten plastic from the nozzle of the
injection molding machine to the entry point for the entire injection mold tool.
It is a separate part from the mold tool itself. A runner is a system of channels
that meet up with the sprue, typically within or as part of the mold tool that
guides the molten plastic into the part cavities within the mold tool. There
are two principal categories of runners (hot and cold) which you can read about
here. Lastly, the gate is the part of the channel after the runner that leads
directly into the part cavity. After an injection mold cycle (typically only
seconds long) the entirety of the molten plastic will cool leaving solid plastic in
the sprue, runners, gates, part cavities themselves, as well as a little bit of
overflow potentially on the edges of the parts (if the seal isn’t 100% right).
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CHAPTER 4
METHODOLOGY
The following procedure has been done during the design and fabrication stage:
2. Design
3. Drawing
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CHAPTER 5
COMPONENTS AND MATERIALS
PLASTICS
5
Types of Plastic Material
6
Table 5.2 Thermosetting Properties
7
Characteristics:
Light in weight
Non-toxic
It is often used in applications where rigidity and stiffness are needed. When
polyethylene is incapable of providing mechanical properties that are
specified, in many cases, it is polypropylene that takes its place.
Hardness: R95
Rigid
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HEATERS
Types of Heaters:-
Band heaters are used in our project as they are economical and easy to use.
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C-CLAMP:
PLATE:
These plates are used for base and for support to the injection molding machine. The
die is placed on this plate.
Material: Mild Steel.
HOLLOW RODS:
It is used to store the plastic granules and the granules are heated with the help of
heater which is surrounded to the hollow rod.
Material: Mild Steel.
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SHAFTS:
A shaft is a rotating machine element, usually circular in cross section, which is used
to transmit power from one part to another, or from a machine which produces power
to a machine which absorbs power. These mild steel shafts are used as a plunger for
pressing the liquid plastic into the mould.
Material: Mild Steel.
Bolted joints are one of the most common elements in construction and
machine design. They consist of fasteners that capture and join other parts, a
secured with the mating of threads. These nuts and bolts are used for fixing
our frame of our project.
Material: Mild Steel
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FRAME:
Frames are mainly used for the support of the other components. This frame
gives the total support for the full assembly. It is made of mild steel plates of
required dimensions.
Material: Mild Steel.
PAINTS:
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CHAPTER-6
DESIGN, CALCULATION,WORKING MODEL &
COST ESTIMATION
3D-VIEW
13
CALCULATION
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Figure 6.3 Die
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CHAPTER 7
MECHANISM:
The injection – moulding machine is shown in the figure consists
of feeding the compounded plastic material as granules, pellets or powder
through the hopper at definite time intervals into the hot vertical cylinder where
it gets softened. Pressure is applied through a manually driven ram or plunger to
push the molten material through a cylinder into a mould fitted at the end of the
cylinder. The molten plastic material from the cylinder is then injected through
a nozzle material from the cylinder is then injected through a nozzle into the
mould cavity.
FFABRICATION:
Machine fabrication is a value added process that involves the
construction of machines and structures from various raw materials. The
process of fabrication started in the machine shop on the basis of engineering
drawings and the availabilities of the shop with respect to machining (facing,
drilling, welding, taper turning etc...)
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Fabrication process for this project contains the following machining
processes:
1. Marking.
2. Cutting.
3. Lathe operations (turning, facing, chamfering).
4. Welding.
5. Assembling.
Marking:
Marking is the act, process, or an instance of making or giving a mark. So
marking is done to know where to cut, drill, weld, machine, etc. the work
piece with correct dimensions. So initially the work pieces are taken and
marked with the design specifications.
Cutting:
Cutting is the separation of a physical object, into two or more portions, through
the application of an acutely directed force.
Implements commonly used for cutting are the knife and saw, or in medicine
and science the scalpel and microtome. However, any sufficiently sharp object
is capable of cutting if it has a hardness sufficiently larger than the object being
cut, and if it is applied with sufficient force. Even liquids can be used to cut
things when applied with sufficient force.
Lathe operations:
A lathe is a tool that rotates the work piece about an axis of rotation to performs
various operations such as cutting, sanding, knurling, drilling, deformation,
facing, turning, with tools that are applied to the work piece to create an object
with symmetry about that axis.
Lathes are used in woodturning, metalworking, metal spinning, thermal
spraying, parts reclamation, and glass-working. Lathes can be used to
shape pottery, the best-known design being the potter's wheel. Most suitably
equipped metalworking lathes can also be used to produce most solids of
revolution, plane surfaces and screw threads or helices.. The work piece is
usually held in place by either one or two centers, at least one of which can
typically be moved horizontally to accommodate varying work piece length
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Welding:
Arc welding is a process that is used to join metal to metal by using electricity
to create enough heat to melt metal, and the melted metals when cool result in a
binding of the metals. It is a type of welding that uses a welding power
supply to create an electric arc between an electrode and the base material to
melt the metals at the welding point. They can use either direct (DC)
or alternating (AC) current, and consumable or non-consumable electrodes. The
welding region is usually protected by some type of shielding gas, vapor, or
slag. Arc welding processes may be manual, semi-automatic, or fully
automated.
Assembling:
Assembly of components is the process of combining the part or subassemblies
to form the final product. Individual parts or subassemblies act as a single unit.
For example, a single-part base plate and a multipart air cylinder subassembly
are both components when placed in an assembly.
Place the tools and the men in the sequence of the operation so that each
component part shall travel the least possible distance while in the
process of finishing.
Use work slides or some other form of carrier so that when a workman
completes his operation, he drops the part always in the same place which
place must always be the most convenient place to his hand and if
possible have gravity carry the part to the next workman for his own.
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CHAPTER 8
DISCUSSIONS
VARIOUS PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS:
Die Setting
Stop the molten material leakage in nozzle
For Diff. die different arrangement of injection mechanism
ADVANTAGES:
Cheaper and easily available material used
Quick response
No fire hazard problem due to over loading
Continuous operation is possible without stopping
High Production Rate
Occupies less floor space
Fastest cycle time in case of rubber, the rubber is warmed before going
into the mold..
Alternative for plastic cups and plates
FUTURE SCOPE:
Plastic injection moulding industry is now facing the very heavy
competition; most of the plastic injection moulding companies is working
on mercy profits and low technologies.
Even if your machine are high speed, but if you are in shortage of
automation system in your injection moulding plants, then you need a lot of
labor to pick up the moulded plastic components from the machine and you
need to stack or collect them before packing. All these need labors and this
will reduce the production capacity, in the same time the labor cost will be
highly increased.
In the project we have used manual plunger arrangement for pressing the
molten plastic instead of that we can have hydraulic arrangement for the
automatic control that will reduce production time.
Also for the batter and quick heating to melt the plastic insulation can be
done which will reduce the heat loss.
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CHAPTER 9
CONCLUSION
Due to its low cost this working model can be successfully inducted in small
scale molding units and can be used to manufactured small plastic components
at an acceptable cycle rate with in an effective cost component. It is one of the
most important processes for plastic and it has a very wide list of products can
be produced, which makes it very versatile.In injection moulding less material is
wasted and final product is of low cost. Injection molding is an extremely
useful tool for mass-producing polymer parts once the parameters for its ideal
operation have been ascertained. Being a net-shape process, Metal Injection
Molding is most competitive where costly machining operations can be avoided
and where the number of parts required is sufficiently high to justify the cost of
the mould.
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CHAPTER 10
REFERENCES
[2] William Liu. “The microscopic features of cavitation erosion and the
solution in the plastic injection molding machines” in Engineering Failure
AnalysisVolume 36, (January 2014) Pages 253-261.
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