Product designers, molders, and mold designers can benefit from this two-day seminar. Engineering and training managers can also benefit from a better appreciation of the characteristics of plastic part quality and performance. Buyers can gain an understand the importance of designer and quality specifications.
EDUCATIONAL GOALS:
This seminar organizes the crowded landscape by breaking the material selection process down to its fundamental elements. It then uses this foundation to build a systematic approach to determining cost-effective solutions that combine the material selection with processing and design considerations. Participants will be taught to distinguish streams of data from truly valuable information and will be able to ask the right questions of their suppliers in order to arrive at viable material selections. The emphasis of the seminar is on thermoplastics and the injection molding process.
WORKSHOP OUTLINE:
1. Defining the Fundamentals that Determine Plastic Properties
Molecular weightthe foundation of polymer technology
The relationship to viscosity
The relationship to properties
Methods of measurement
New technologies that change the rules
Methods of polymerizationaddition and condensation polymers
Effect on properties
Effect on processing
Polaritywhy nylons absorb water and polyethylenes absorb gasoline
Amorphous and semi-crystalline polymers the one thing you must know about polymer structure
Detecting the presence of crystalline structure
Effects on processing
Effects on properties
The role of polymer blends
2. Property EvaluationsShort Term
Tensile, flexural, and compressive properties
Impact properties various methods of measurement
Thermal properties
Other properties flammability, wear resistance, optical, etc.
Why the data sheet properties do not work for material selection
The behavior behind the numbers
The role of material property databases and selection utilities
3. Property EvaluationsLong Term
Effects of temperature
Reduction in strength and stiffness at elevated temperatures
Dimensional stability
Structural changes due to thermal aging
Thermal degradation and oxidation
Loss of ductility at reduced temperatures
Chemical resistanceeffects of temperature and time
Creep resistance, stress relaxation, and fatigue
Defining the mechanisms
Data presentation
Accelerated testing methodsadvantages and pitfalls
The fundamental equivalence of temperature and time