
SURFACE TREATMENT
Lower Deposition Temperature PVD Coatings Allow for Greater Choice in Mold Materials
New technology allows for application temperatures as low as 200°C (390°F) with no loss in coating performance.
|
||||||
|
LEARNMORE
How to Prevent Seizing and/or Galling of Wear Plates, Slides And Core Pins
Using PVD/PACVD surface treatments can produce a desired tribological behavior without a costly change to design or material. How Surface Treatments Keep
PET bottle core coated with low-temperature titanium nitride coating. Image courtesy of Oerlikon Balzers. Conventional PVD Coatings Key applications of PVD coatings are on ejector guide elements, cavities and cores where the coatings’ tribological properties protect against seizure and corrosion. Internal lubricants and release agents can in some cases be eliminated. The coatings’ hardness and wear resistance protect molds from highly glass- or mineral-filled resins, as well as hot-gas corrosion from materials like PVCs and CPVCs. PVD coatings for tools are conventionally applied by arc deposition temperatures between 400 and 500°C (750 to 930°F), which makes them well suited for steels with higher tempering temperatures including M2 and CPM grades. However, this high deposition temperature made PVD coating unfeasible for a wide variety of cold working steels, copper alloys and die steels that are used in plastic processing. Lower Deposition Temperature = Greater Choice of Materials This technology not only improves the productivity and tool life of existing mold components, but also allows moldmakers, designers and molders a greater material choice when designing new molds and components. Improved durability, higher surface hardness and increased service temperatures can be achieved from less expensive, easier to machine mold materials including cold-working steels, die steels and copper alloys. This article discusses three high-performance nitride coatings produced by the lower temperature arc evaporation process, which will be of particular interest to moldmakers: a titanium nitride coating1, a monolayered chromium nitride coating2 and a nano-layered titanium aluminium nitride coating3. Improved Demolding It has a surface hardness of 2300HV and a coefficient of friction against steel of 0.4. These properties help prevent the buildup of resins, increase wear-resistance and provide a surface that is easier to clean. The inert properties of this low deposition temperature PVD make it ideal for molds working in linear polyesters (PC, PBT(B), PET(P)) and styrene polymers (PS, SB, SAN, ABS, ASA). Additionally, this coating is biocompatible and safe for food contact.
Wear, Corrosion and Oxidation Resistance These properties give plastic injection molds an advantageous combination of wear, corrosion and oxidation resistance. This coating is well suited for coating molds that work in plastics that, during processing, outgas chlorine, fluorine or other aggressive volatile contents, including: polyolefins (PE, PP, PB), acetal resins (POM), polyamides (PA), linear polyesters (PC, PBT(B), PET(P), and polyaryis/polysulphones (PPE, PEEK, PAEK/PPS, PSU, PES). Hardness and Stability
These are ideal for plastic injection molds with textured surfaces and for working in engineered plastics including polyamides (PA) and polyaris/polysulphones (PPE, PEEK, PAEK/PPS, PSU, PES). It is also well suited for the processing of melts with fiberglass reinforcement and die-cast aluminum molds. Summary This coating technology gives moldmakers, designers and molders a greater material choice when designing new molds and components without having to sacrifice mold performance or life. References |
||||||
| MoldMaking Technology Online is a trademark of Gardner Publications, Inc, copyright 2008. MoldMaking Technology and all contents are properties of Gardner Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |