Country for PR: Japan
Contributor: Kyodo News JBN
Wednesday, July 14 2021 - 16:00
AsiaNet
Polyplastics Develops New Testing Method to Identify Gas Formation during Injection Molding
TOKYO, July 14, 2021 /Kyodo JBN-AsiaNet/ --

Polyplastics Co., Ltd., a leading global supplier of engineering 
thermoplastics, has developed a testing method that identifies gas formation 
during the injection molding process and helps to reduce mold deposits. The 
company's Gas Investigation Method in Injection Molding (GIMIM) facilitates 
continuous molding and improves production efficiency.

Image1: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M100475/202107077399/_prw_PI1fl_Pl0lrF18.jpg


During the injection molding process, harsh conditions (high temperature, high 
speed) and deterioration of plastic additives can release high volumes of 
decomposition gases. Mold deposits, gas burns, and short shots caused by 
pyrolysis gas can lead to quality problems, including undesirable effects on 
the dimensions and appearance of products, resulting in a higher defect rate. 
Maintaining highly efficient production operations is important as 
manufacturers work to meet today's highly challenging applications such as 
automotive electrification and automation.

Polyplastics' proprietary method captures and evaluates the gases formed during 
molding and identifies the mechanism by which pyrolysis gas forms during 
injection molding. The innovative proprietary method traps gases according to 
mold-based methods, uses gas chromatography mass spectrometers (GC/MS) to 
qualitatively and quantitatively analyze their composition, identifies the 
gases that are formed, and makes fundamental improvements to the sources of 
their formation.

This simple system configuration is divided into the three stages of 
plasticization, metering, and injection, and each unit is fitted with gas traps 
to seclude the gases that form within each part of the process. GIMIM can 
reflect the actual circumstances during molding by directly trapping and 
analyzing the gases formed during molding.

GIMIM makes it possible to measure high-molecular-weight substances that can 
cause mold deposits. Since this method directly analyzes gases that are formed 
inside the mold during filling, the company believes it yields results that are 
closest to real-world conditions. In further research, Polyplastics plans to 
examine other problems caused by pyrolysis gas such as short shots and gas burn 
defects, as well as mold deposits.

For more information, visit: 
https://www.polyplastics.com/en/support/mold/gas_md/index.html

About Polyplastics: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/attach/202107077399-O1-jJN6E3ZH.pdf


Source: Polyplastics Co., Ltd.