Rotational Molding is a very versatile process of creating virtually all kinds of mostly hollow Plastic Parts. The phrase is often shortened to the word rotomolding. Alternative spellings: Rotational moulding, Rotomoulding.
The process was developed in the 1940's but in the early years attracted little attention because it was regarded as a slow process which was restricted to a small number of plastics. However, over the past two decades, improvements in process control and developments with plastic powders have resulted in a very significant increase in usage of the process.
Critics of the process point to its long cycle times- only one or two cycles an hour can typically occur, as opposed to other processes such as injection molding, where parts can be made in a few seconds. The process does have distinct advantages though. The manufacture of large, hollow parts such as oil tanks is much easier by rotational molding than any other method. Rotational molds are significantly cheaper than other types of mold too- in the order of hundreds of US Dollars, rather than thousands as for other polymer processing molds.
The rotational molding process consists of four distinct phases:
1- Loading a measured quantity of polymer (usually in powder form) into the mold.
2- Heating the mold in an oven whilst it rotates, until all the polymer has melted and adhered to the mold wall. The length of time the mold spends in the oven is critical- too long, and the polymer will degrade, reducing impact strength. If the mold spends too little time in the oven, melting of the polymer may be incomplete. The polymer grains will not have time to fully melt and coalesce on the mold wall, resulting in large bubbles in the polymer. This has an adverse effect on the mechanical properties of the finished product.
3- Cooling of the mold, usually by fan. This stage of the cycle can be quite lengthy too- the polymer must be cooled to a temperature where it solidifies and can be handled safely by the operator. This typically takes tens of minutes. The part will shrink on cooling, coming away from the mold, and facilitating easy removal of the part. The cooling rate must be kept within a certain range- very rapid cooling (e.g., by water spray) would result in the part cooling and shrinking at an uncontrolled rate, producing a warped part.
4- Removal of the part.
Much of the current research is looking into lowering the long cycle times as well as improving part quality. The most promising area is within mold pressurisation- it is well known that applying a small amount of pressure internally to the mold at the correct point in the heating phase of the cycle speeds up the coalescence of the polymer particles during the melting phase, producing a part with less bubbles in a shorter period of time than at atmospheric pressure. This pressure also delays the separation of the part from the mold wall due to shrinkage during the cooling phase, aiding removal of heat from the part and therefore speeding the cooling phase too. The main drawback to this is the danger of explosion of a pressurised part to the operator- something that has prevented mold pressurisation becoming adopted on a large scale by rotomolding manufacturers.
Natural Materials: Its only been possible relatively recently, but natural materials can also be used. Through the use of real sands and stone chip, sandstone composite can be created which is 80% natural non-processed material.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Rotational molding".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world