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First injection molding application using polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) in mass production Reinhard Bauer - Technokomm, for Wittmann Battenfeld GmbH Polyvinyl alcohol (PVAL) is a plastic material little known so far. It offers the outstanding attribute of solubility in water with simultaneous high resistance to most contact chemicals. PVAL has been little known until recently, primarily because it could only be processed into film, but manufacturing injection-molded parts from it was not possible. The reason was its large variation in characteristic material values due to batch production. This changed, however, with the solutions discovered by the Austro-Polish injection molding company Buzek Plastic, which developed over a period of 10 years and in several evolutionary steps a mass production technology for making water-soluble, multi-chamber laundry detergent containers (Fig.1), of which it is now producing 1.3 billion units per year. The machinery and automation technology for this purpose have been supplied by Wittmann Battenfeld. Polyvinyl alcohol, largely unknown in spite of unique attributes
Fig. 1: Polyvinyl alcohol containers, resistant against acids and alkaline compounds, but soluble in water, are used in large numbers for laundry detergent applications. (Photo: author) Polyvinyl alcohol production can be controlled with the result of PVAC being transformed either entirely or only partly into PVAL. The more residual acetate the polyvinyl alcohol still contains, the lower its solubility in water. The varying acetate content also causes variations in melting point, melt viscosity and processing parameters. While the melting point for fully hydrolyzed PVAL is about 230°C, it ranges from 180 to 200°C for partly hydrolyzed types. The density ranges from 1.21 to 1.31 g/cm3, depending on the type of material. Fig. 2: The production plant of Buzek Plastic Poland in Plonsk, which was built following the principle of data networking according to an Internet 4.0 concept. Moreover, PVAL is an excellent film formation agent with good wetting properties. Consequently, watery solutions are processed as ingredients for glues or adhesives and for thickeners in hair sprays or shampoos. They are also used as additives in paper processing, or as mold release agents in the production of fiber composite parts, which can subsequently be rinsed off. In PET bottle production, PVAL is used as a CO2 barrier layer. It is also quite common in film production, for example for packaging bags intended to be dissolved. Somewhat more exotic are forensic applications, where pads with layers of PVAL are used to track traces of gunpowder. PVAL injection molding = breaking new ground Fig. 3: Andreas Huber, Managing Director of Buzek Plastic, in front of the operating panel for material feeding. (Photo: author) This was the starting point in 2003, when a multi-national chemical company made an enquiry at Buzek Kunststoffverarbeitung in Austria about production equipment to manufacture injection-molded single portion packages for dishwashing granulate. Andreas Huber, Managing Director and CEO of Buzek Holding GmbH in Austria and Buzek Plastic Poland, recalls: “New technical challenges in terms of injection molding processes have always fascinated me. Here, the foundation was laid while I was still Product Manager for Special Materials at Battenfeld. I could hardly believe that nobody had yet succeeded in manufacturing mass-produced parts from polyvinyl alcohol. This only became clear to me after the first plasticizing tests, for the results were very similar to wallpaper paste. So the material stuck firmly to the mold. It is not surprising that polyvinyl alcohol is found in every paper glue. Now I knew that the road to series production would be a long one. But on the other hand, I also suspected that if we succeeded, the product would have an enormous potential. So today, I am very glad that my business partner Günter Buzek and I were also able to gain the cooperation of the Battenfeld management for this project. Their giving it the green light meant that we were jointly able to start the systematic development of an appropriate application technology.” Fig. 4: Production cells around a WITTMAN BATTENFELD MacroPower E 450/2100 are used in production. Their high-speed injection capacity combined with high positioning accuracy offers the necessary prerequisites for injection molding of polyvinyl alcohol. (Photo: author) Application technology becoming a project in its own right In the course of testing, it became obvious that PVAL processing required significantly more expert knowledge than could be expected from a newcomer to injection molding production such as the chemical company which had made the enquiry. Consequently, Andreas Huber decided jointly with another former Battenfeld colleague by the name of Günter Buzek, who had been operating an injection molding plant of his own since 1999, to present their offer to the chemical company for handling the production as a sub supplier. They still maintained this offer, even when the negotiations were no longer about delivering supplies from Austria, but about the construction of an “in-house production facility” at the company’s Polish filling plant, and they established Buzek Plastic Poland Sp.z.o.o. in May 2005. Using three hydraulic HM 270/1330 machines from Battenfeld with rechargeable injection batteries, the leap from a 12-cavity test mold to 32-cavity hot-runner molds was made, and series production was started. In spite of numerous “outliers” among material data and consequently high reject rates, the production got under way. The key factor was a situation-related production method, which consisted of manual parameter adjustment based on continuous observation of the material’s behavior and included 100 per cent visual inspection of the finished parts by operating staff on every machine. 2005: evolutionary stage II, 32- and 64-cavity production cells become standard After about another year, the process technology and composition of the material compound had been stabilized to the point where a further increase in production capacity could be considered. As the product design was not altered for the time being, the cycle time remained unchanged at 28 seconds, with a scrap rate of about 15 per cent. What had to be further improved though, was the method of visual parts inspection. Instead of separate inspection on every machine, a multi-track parts transfer system was installed, to which several machines were connected, and which transported the parts to a central inspection station where every single part was still inspected by human staff. In 2008, the production routine of the Buzek team had been stabilized to the extent that the number of cavities could be doubled once more, this time from 32 to 64. However, the aim was not only to double the number of cavities, but also to combine this with a reduction in cycle time. To provide the necessary prerequisites, the molded part was re-designed in close cooperation with the customer’s engineers, with a selective reduction of wall thicknesses which led to a 15 % decrease in both part weight and cycle time. But this required larger and faster machines. Because of positive past experience, Battenfeld was again selected as equipment supplier, and the hydraulic models chosen were HM 400 / 2250 machines, again with rechargeable injection batteries, including Battenfeld robots and parts transfer systems. The result of this evolutionary stage was impressive: within only three years from production start-up, the company had increased production output by 300% and simultaneously reduced the scrap rate from 15 to 9 per cent. The high output volume forced the company to create a new concept for quality inspection of the finished parts. This was no longer feasible using human staff, neither economically nor in terms of available human resources. To solve this problem, the Buzek team installed a supporting visual inspection system with automatic separation of rejects. A mere supporting system, because it was able to recognize only the parts’ general completeness, but not every defect in minor details. 2013/14: evolutionary stage III, a new plant according to the Industry 4.0 concept Fig. 6: Every workpiece carrier passes through a vision control station (shown at the bottom on the left) for automatic scanning of every molded part from 5 directions (Photo: author) The Managing Director of Buzek Plastic, Andreas Huber, explains: “After we had communicated our wishes and ideas to several machine manufacturers, we finally found again the right partners in the Wittmann team, which is open for innovation. Thanks to their extensive production centered around injection molding machines and their pioneering work with interface technology (Wittmann 4.0 system), our concept of a production plant regulating itself within certain limits was not dismissed as a kind of utopia, but realized step by step together with us”. Fig. 7: The quality management system is able to take and analyze 5 pictures of every molded part. For this purpose, 12 cameras plus an additional mirror system are used. The system is capable of shooting 64 x 5 pictures within the machine’s cycle time! The analysis system connected with it has been set to identify 23 different potential defects. (Photo: author) Fig. 8: Pick& place handling devices subsequently sort out all parts identified as scrap and replace them with good parts (see good parts buffer at the center above the handling station). (Photo: author) Fig. 9: From the transfer pallets, the molded parts are deposited in transport trays inside shipping boxes and then passed on to the filling machine of the laundry detergent manufacturer. (Photo: author) Evolutionary stage IV in view Now all fully automatic production cells at the new plant are once again utilized to 100%. The next evolutionary step is replacing the older equipment on the in-house production floor by additional production cells at the new plant. Again this not only involves another increase in capacity, but also another rise in efficiency. Thanks to latest innovative design adjustments which will enable a further reduction in product weight, there are realistic prospects of another 300 per cent increase in productivity. Wittmann Battenfeld GmbH Wiener Neustädter Straße 81 Phone: +43 2252 404-0 Internet: www.wittmann-group.com |
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