
SURFACETREATMENT
“Top Secret”: How to Protect Your Mold, Its Surface Finish, Dimensions and Integrity
Mold coating challenges and solutions for those working within the aerospace industry.
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Coatings and Finishes for Electrical and Electronics Molding
Electrical and electronic components take many forms and functions and require special attention when considering surface treatment options. Coatings and Finishes for Packaging Molds How Surface Treatments Keep Molds Operating Longer Interestingly, many products we use in our
every day lives were originally developed This also holds true for coatings frequently used in the tooling industry. Take Nickel-PTFE, for example. This very popular mold coating was originally developed for use by NASA to facilitate grease-free lubricity in space applications, such as the robot used for collecting rocks on the moon or Mars. How was it first developed? The Teflon® particles carry an ion charge to attract them to the part of the mold to be plated. The tricky part of this chemistry is preventing the particles you want co-deposited from plating themselves and also keeping them in full suspension in the plating bath instead of on the bottom of the plating tank. Once researchers figured out the formula for this dispersion, other particles such as diamond and boron nitride became much easier to develop. Like Nickel-PTFE, nickel boron nitride was developed several years ago for more advanced applications in manufacturing. It provided more lubricity with higher hardness benefits in high temperature applications. While this co-deposition was developed for very specific, high-end manufacturing purposes, now moldmakers building molds in all industries look to this coating and its benefits. Strict process control when using each of these coatings is developed and monitored by such organizations as NADCAP, MillSpec, AESF and ISO. Some Aerospace and Other Applications Jet plane joy stick control Gun components Bomb and missile components Detonation devices Tank components New and Aggressive Molding Compounds Summary |
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