By: Mikell Knights
Vernay Lab Inc. is a major producer of precision rubber fluid-control components at four plants in the U.S. and Europe. "In rubber molding, the temperature of the mold is the heart of the process, so maintaining a uniform thermal profile across the tool is vital," says Maheshwari of Griffin plant, Verynay's biggest in North America.
The company was having a big problem controlling temperature uniformity in production of a special gasket seal used in printer cartridges. This rectangular gasket contains 12 tiny O-rings compression molded of EDPM rubber. Vernay molds 650,000 gaskets per month using two 112-cavity molds running on 375-ton presses. Vernay uses a 300-g shot to mold the parts, which act as a fluid interconnect seal in the print head of a six-color printer. Ink flows through the inner diameter of the O-rings, so any distortion of that I.D. affects the ink flow.
A prototype six-cavity tool was developed for researching the application. Scrap rates were at least 50%, due to flash in the I.D. of the O-ring. The development team found that mold surface temperature needed to be in a very tight range (+ or - 2 degrees Celsius) to mold a good part. But Vernay discovered that the mold surface temperature was not uniform, which also led to uneven curing. Vernay saw temperature variances of up to 5 deg. to 10 deg. C from one side of the tool to the other, and as much as 4.7 deg. from cavity to cavity. "If the temperature was too high it caused flash or distortion, and if it was too low it created part surface issues," recalls Maheshwari.
Rubber compression molds typically do not contain heating or cooling systems. Rather, the mold is heated through conduction from the platen, which is outfitted with cartridge heaters. Compression molders typically want to hold mold temperature variance to no more than 5 deg. to 10 deg. C.
Rubber compression molders typically use a single point of thermal control in the platen, adjusting all of the heaters simulataneously. Maheshwari found that the platen intended to heat up more the center than along the edges. One option would have been to segment the platen into heat zones, but the standard open-loop control would give no indication of how close the actual temperature in the mold was to the desired temperature.
To solve the problem, Vernay teamed up with Priamus System Technologies to develop what's said to be the world's first closed-loop, multi-zone mold-surface temperature-control system. A platen was built with cartridge heaters arranged in nine control zones. Vernay installed Priamus temperature sensors in the mold close to the cavity surface. The thermocouples are grouped in nine monitoring zones that correspond to the platen heating zones. New software, called Priamus Heat, uses the temperature registered by the mold thermocouple to drive the setpoint temperatures of the corresponding platen zone. "Every zone in the platen talks to a corresponding zone in the mold," says Maheshwari.
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