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Authors Fischer, M. ; Pöhlmann, P. ; Kühnert, I.
Title Morphology and mechanical properties of micro injection molded polyoxymethylene tensile rods
Date 01.12.2019
Number 57471
Abstract Micro injection molding is a key process in the high-volume production of systems with small-scale parts, as it enables the production of consistent high-quality parts. Depending on the materials used, however, the properties of the parts may be strongly dependent on the processing conditions. Semi-crystalline materials, in particular, exhibit process-dependent structural evolution. To evaluate the impact of processing conditions on the morphology of polyoxymethylene (POM), thin sections of micro-injection-molded tensile rods with total shot weights of around 0.04·g were examined for samples with and without weld lines. Production was set according to an experimental design (DoE), varying injection flow rate, mold temperature, and melt temperature. For the measurement of the crystallinity a DSC analysis was performed. To supplement these results and to improve the understanding of the process-property relationship, tensile tests were performed under light microscopy and a fractographic analysis was done using electron microscopy (SEM). The mechanical behavior of the samples without weld lines was improved by lowering the melt temperature and the injection velocity, which resulted in a thicker skin layer. The elongation at break of the weld line samples was increased by processing at higher mold temperatures, which also resulted in changes to the morphological structure of the samples.
Publisher Polymer Testing
Wikidata
Citation Polymer Testing 80 (2019) 106078
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/J.POLYMERTESTING.2019.106078
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