Injection Moulding

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DT Note on Injection Moulding, created by connieturner6 on 11/04/2013.
connieturner6
Note by connieturner6, updated more than 1 year ago
connieturner6
Created by connieturner6 about 11 years ago
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Name a specific polymer suitable for the manufacture of the chair. [2]Polypropylene.Explain why this polymer is suitable for the chair. [6]Polypropylene is a thermoplastic and therefore suitable for injection moulding.It is stiff but will flex slightly to prevent fracture under shock load, for example when someone sits on it or leans back.It is available in a range of colours to suit different settings.It does not require any finishing/future maintenance.It is weather resistant but the colour and surface tend to degrade over time if left outside.Use notes and diagrams to explain how the chair is manufactured. [9]Stage 1Plastic granules are inserted into the hopper along with a colour pigment.Stage 2Granules are moved along the injection moulder by an Archimedean screw, which compresses the plastic.Stage 3Heaters melt the plastic. When sufficient plastic is melted, the screw retracts and a hydraulic ram forces a charge of plastic into the mould.Stage 4The moulding is cooled by water coolers within the mould sections. When the item has set, the mould splits. Ejector pins/and or compressed air force the moulding outould.Stage 5Complex mouldings may be placed in a suitable jig whilst the polymer is still slightly flexible to maintain dimensional accuracy. Sprue pins and flash would be removeed.

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