1. Warpage and countermeasure for injection-molded in-mold labeling parts
- Author
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Larpsuriyakul, Patcharee and Fritz, Hans-Gerhard
- Subjects
Labels -- Structure -- Thermal properties -- Mechanical properties ,Injection molding -- Research ,Engineering and manufacturing industries ,Science and technology - Abstract
Decades ago, the production of packaging with the injection in-mold labeling (IML) has been established. With this manufacturing technique, label and packaging, both are of the same polymeric material, become inseparably connected during the injection molding process. Because thermal conductivity of the polymeric label material is clearly smaller than that of the metal mold wall, thermal-induced warpage of injected IML parts or part surface deformation could occur. In this study, structure and warpage behavior of IML parts, which are different from those of conventional molded parts without labels were intensively investigated. It was found that it is the volume contraction difference between label and substrate that forces IML parts to warp to the opposite side of the label. In addition, IML part warpage problem can be coped by varying the mold temperature on the stationary and moving mold platen. By increasing the mold temperature on the label side, the degree of IML part warpage can be reduced with acceptable reduction in mechanical properties. The optimum mold temperature range for particular substrate material, however, was found to be more decisive in maintaining the modulus of elasticity of IML parts than the magnitude of mold temperature difference. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 51:411-418, 2011. [C]2010 Society of Plastics Engineers, INTRODUCTION Injection in-mold labeling (IML) is an injection molding technique in which the film, label, or decorating material is back-molded (1-3). This molding concept ranks nowadays among the most modern [...]
- Published
- 2011
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