Optimization of Injection Molding Parameters for Warpage Reduction on Polypropylene Plates
Academic Article in Scopus
-
- Overview
-
- Identity
-
- Additional document info
-
- View All
-
Overview
abstract
-
Injection molding is a high-volume manufacturing process widely used for producing polymer components; however, its process parameters strongly influence residual stress, warpage, and the resulting mechanical performance. This work presents a comprehensive factorial design and ANOVA to evaluate the simultaneous effects of the injection temperature, packing pressure, packing time, and specimen orientation on the warpage, hardness, tensile, and flexural properties of polypropylene plates. The results demonstrate that the injection temperature and packing pressure are the dominant factors affecting the hardness and ultimate tensile strength, whereas warpage is mainly governed by the injection temperature and orientation. Under the tested conditions, certain combinations of injection temperature and packing pressure led to an improved mechanical performance; however, these adjustments also produced reductions in other properties, indicating that the balance among parameters depends on the targeted application rather than a single optimal set. Conversely, the parameter combination that produced the lowest warpage still yielded a significant increase in (Formula presented.), indicating that reducing the warpage does not necessarily compromise the tensile stiffness. Interestingly, variations in the stress distribution between the tensile and bending tests suggest that the solidification-induced structure of the material influences its mechanical response, with specimens that showed a lower tensile strength exhibiting a comparatively higher resistance under bending. These findings provide new insights into the trade-offs between dimensional accuracy and mechanical performance and offer practical guidelines for optimizing polypropylene injection molding processes. © 2025 by the authors.
status
publication date
published in
Identity
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Additional document info
has global citation frequency
volume