Commonly extruded materials are copper (pipe for plumbing), aluminium (various extrusion profiles for tracks, frames, rails, mullions), steel (rod, track), titanium (aircraft components, including seat tracks, engine rings, structural parts), rubber (tire tread and sidewalls), a multitude of plastics (tubing, pipes, rods, rails, seals), and grains such as wheat, corn, and rice for food products.
Steel and titanium extrusions use glass powder as a lubricant. This process was invented in France, in 1935 by Mr Séjournet. This solution was patented throughout the world and helped launch industrial steel extrusion. The process was later applied to titanium.
Plastic extrusion commonly uses plastic chips or pellets, which are dried in a hopper before going to the feed screw. The polymer resin is heated to molten state as it is fed to the extrusion tooling. The die molds the heated mass into the desired shape. The heated mass is cooled and solidified as it is pulled through the die or water tank. In some cases (such as fibre reinforced tubes) the extrudate is pulled through a very long die, in a process called pultrusion.
Extrusion simulation tools help to understand extrusion process and to optimize development of tools and products.
Unit operations | Metal forming | Food industry
Extrusion (Fertigungstechnik) | Extrusión | Extrusion | Extrusie | Ekstrudering
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