Injection unit of an injection system

Plastic article or earthenware shaping or treating: apparatus – Female mold and charger to supply fluent stock under... – With accumulator – trap chamber – or serially arranged valves...

Reexamination Certificate

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C425S585000, C425S542000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06527539

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to an injection unit of an injection system of an injection molding machine, in particular of a two stage injection system.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
An injection molding machine comprises an injection system, a mold and a press. The injection system provides essentially two functions during the course of a normal cycle of operation; namely, extruder and injection. In a standard reciprocating screw injection unit, the extruder function is accomplished when the screw is rotated, gradually moving plastic melt toward the forward end of the screw, thereby creating a force to move the screw rearward to its pre-injection position as the melt accumulates. When the desired amount of melt, generally called a shot, is accumulated, the screw is rapidly moved forward (without rotation) to inject the melt straight into the mold, thus performing the injection function. This can however involve quite substantial wear of the screw, especially in case of big injection molding machines.
The injection system can also be designed as a “two-stage” system, where the extruder and injection functions are performed by separate machine elements; namely a plasticizing unit and an injection unit. The plasticizing unit comprises a feed screw in a heated barrel for performing the extruder function. The plastic melt is diverted into an injection chamber of the injection unit rather than being conveyed from the barrel directly to the mold cavity. An injection ram is subsequently operated in the injection chamber to perform the injection of the plastic melt into the mold. The advantages of such a two-stage injection system include more uniform plastification of material and reduced wear on the screw and barrel. Due to the fact that the material is plasticized in a continuous process, the melt obtained is less liable to degradation.
However, a major disadvantage of such an injection system is the material carryover from shot-to-shot. Indeed, some of the plastic melt remains in the injection chamber of the injection unit after injection. This causes major problems, especially if the plastic melt remains in the injection chamber for several cycles. The longer it remains in the injection chamber, the longer it is being held at a high temperature and the more it degrades. Although the amount of plastic material remaining in the injection chamber can be minimized through the construction of the injection chamber, it cannot be prevented. Furthermore, the material carryover from shot-to-shot causes color changes to be extremely slow and expensive. Lots of material is wasted during the cleaning of the injection chamber.
These disadvantages can be avoided by using a FIFO-injection system (first in-first out), wherein the melt first transferred into the injection chamber will be the melt first escaping through the injection nozzle. FIFO-injection systems ensure that the melt remaining in the injection chamber after one cycle will be the first melt to be shot out during the following cycle.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,950,501 describes an injection cylinder of such a FIFO-injection system. The injection cylinder has a shell with a bore therein, defining an injection chamber. One end of the shell has a passage therethrough communicating with an injection nozzle. An injection ram is adapted to reciprocate within the bore. The bore is of a diameter larger than the diameter of the injection ram, thus providing an annular channel to permit the flow of plasticized material between the ram and the cylinder wall. The bore is provided with an annular recess or pooling area adjacent and in communication with an opening laterally arranged in the shell for leading plasticized material from a plasticizing unit into the injection chamber. As soon as one injection stroke has been performed, filling of the injection cylinder commences. While the injection ram is still in its extended position, plasticized material enters the injection cylinder through the lateral opening and fills the annular recess, which distributes it around the circumference of the injection ram. The material is then forced in an annular film through the annular channel towards the discharge end. By doing so, it pushes the material remaining from the previous, injection stroke ahead. As the plasticized material accumulates near the discharge end, the injection ram is pushed rearwardly. However, as the plasticized material is laterally forced into the injection cylinder, an important radial force is exerted onto the injection ram, which can result in the tilting of the latter. The.annular film flowing toward the discharge end will then have different thickness, around the circumference of the injection ram. This may create dead zones, in which the material flow is limited or even prevented. Material remaining in the injection chamber from one cycle is not necessarily pushed ahead by freshly in flowing material during the following cycle. Depending on the construction of the injection cylinder, and the force with which plasticized material is forced into the injection cylinder, it is also possible for the injection ram to become jammed in the injection chamber. Frictional forces of the ram on the injection chamber walls can result in damage to the ram and hence in premature maintenance work being necessary, or even in the seizing of the injection ram.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,814,358 discloses an injection molding cylinder that comprises a housing with a cylindrical longitudinal bore, in which a sleeve is longitudinally displaceably arranged. The outside diameter of the sleeve and the inside diameter of the longitudinal bore are such that an annular gap remains between the sleeve and the longitudinal bore. An ejection piston is axially displaceable within the sleeve and has an outside diameter which is slightly smaller than the inside diameter of the sleeve, so that an annular gap remains between the ejection piston and the inside peripheral surface of the sleeve. The internal space delimited by the sleeve is the storage space for the plastic material to be introduced in an injection molding tool. The sleeve is connected to a second piston, which can move the sleeve so as to open or close plastic material in and outlets. In a first position, the inlet is open, whereas the outlet is closed; in a second position, the outlet is open, whereas the inlet is closed. In its first position, the sleeve allows plastic material to be introduced into the storage space. On its outside peripheral surface, the sleeve is provided with a distributor passage, which is arranged to extend substantially around the periphery of the sleeve but extending inclinedly relative to the longitudinal axis of the sleeve. When the sleeve is in its first position, one apex region of the distributor passage is disposed opposite the mouth opening of the feed conduit. Starting from that apex region, the distributor passage extends at an acute angle relative to the longitudinal axis of the housing and thus the sleeve at both sides of the latter towards a second apex region of the distributor passage. The second apex region is arranged in displaced relationship with respect to the first apex region, in a direction towards a free end of the sleeve. Adjoining the distributor passage is the annular gap between the sleeve and the longitudinal bore. The distributor passage distributes the plastic material supplied from the feed conduit over the periphery of the sleeve. The plastic material is then forced towards the free end of the sleeve, where it enters the storage space. After filling of the storage space, the sleeve is displaced in its second position, in which it allows the plastic material accumulated in the storage space to be forced into the injection molding tool by the ejection piston. This injection molding cylinder has the disadvantage that the plastic material has a very long way to travel from the mouth of the feed conduit to the storage space. As the plastic material has to squeeze through a rather long narrow channel, the pressure at the mouth of the feed condui

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