Plastic part manufacturers are always
looking for ways to reduce cycle time and get more productivity out of their
injection molding machinery. One of the longstanding constraints in injection molding production has been cooling time. Removing parts from the mold before
they have cooled induces warping or shrinking. But wait time works against
productivity.
Another constraint has been cooling
channels drilled straight through the metal blocks of injection molds using CNC
machining. While coolant is passed through the channels to cool the mold and
draw heat away from the part after it has been injected, the efficiency of that
cooling process is limited by the conventional straight-line drilling that's
used for the channels.
But if those cooling channels could more
closely conform to the shape of the part, the cooling process could become more
efficient and faster. According to Tober Sun, manager for the technical
research division at software provider Moldex3D, a typical production cycle for
a plastic part is 30 seconds to a minute, but cooling takes more than half of
that cycle time.
Thus, he says conformal cooling has emerged
as a practice, which is being aided by advances in additive manufacturing. With
a conformal cooling channel design, the toolmaker can use an additive process
to lay down the mold one layer at a time, fashioning the cooling channels along
the way and curving them to any desired shape.
According to plastics consultant Robert A.
Beard, “a typical cycle-time reduction range for a properly engineered,
conformally cooled mold is 20% to 40%.” Such savings can lead to much greater
productivity, especially in high-volume plants producing millions of parts.
Many industry observers associate conformal
cooling with laser sintering, in which a solid object is printed by melting
metallic powder using lasers. Sun told Design News that he prefers the broader
term “additive manufacturing,” because of the widespread perception that
sintered molds are not as strong as machined molds.
“It's not really sintering anymore. I prefer to call it remelting,”
as it produces a solid metal object, he said. Sun stresses that additive manufacturing
technologies are now handling very strong and durable materials, such as
stainless steel and titanium, which compete well with machined molds. “Strength
is no longer an issue,” he contended.
Sun recognizes that the added design effort
and the use of additive technologies will increase the cost of mold
development. But injection molds are expensive to start with, as they usually
cost anywhere from $30,000 up to $1 million. The true economic concern
shouldn't be the comparative cost of conformal molds versus traditional molds,
Sun insists, but the trade-off between the added cost of the conformal mold
versus the savings in cooling time on the production line. “The mold is quite
unique and expensive, but you are using that single mold to make millions of
parts. So it's important to increase the efficiency of that mold.”
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