Injection Molding Nylon: Processing Parameters and Troubleshooting

Complete guide to injection molding nylon — melt temperatures, mold temperatures, drying, troubleshooting common defects, and optimization strategies.

Injection Molding Processing

Why Nylon Requires Special Processing Attention

Injection Molding Processing

Nylon is one of the most challenging materials to injection mold successfully. Its combination of high melt temperature, extreme moisture sensitivity, high melt viscosity, and tendency toward warpage means that small deviations in processing parameters cause large quality variations. A molding machine running polycarbonate without incident may produce entirely rejected parts when switching to unfilled PA66 without adjusting for its specific requirements.

This guide provides the complete parameter framework and troubleshooting methodology for injection molding engineers working with nylon materials.

Core Processing Parameters

Temperature Settings:

Paramètre PA6 PA66 PA12 PA6-GF30 PA66-GF30
Melt Temp (°C) 230-260 270-290 240-270 240-270 280-300
Température du moule (°C) 60-80 80-100 40-60 80-100 80-110
Nozzle Temp (°C) 230-260 270-290 240-270 245-275 285-300
Front Zone 230-250 265-280 235-255 235-255 270-285
Rear Zone 230-250 265-280 235-255 235-255 270-285

Why higher mold temperature for PA66?
PA66 has higher melt viscosity and higher crystallinity. Low mold temperature produces parts with low crystallinity that continue to crystallize after ejection, causing warpage and dimensional instability. Higher mold temperature (80-100°C) locks in crystallinity during the cycle, producing dimensionally stable parts.

Drying: The Non-Negotiable First Step:
Never mold nylon that hasn’t been properly dried. Required drying conditions:

Matériau Température Hours Max Moisture
PA6 80°C 4-6h 0.20%
PA66 85°C 4-6h 0.15%
All GF/CF grades 85°C 4-6h 0.12%

Use desiccant dryers with dew point monitoring. Verify with moisture analyzers for critical parts.

Injection and Pressure Parameters

Vitesse et pression d'injection:
Nylon’s high melt viscosity requires higher injection pressure than polypropylene or polystyrene:

Injection Pressure 80-120 MPa 100-140 MPa 70-100 MPa
Pack Pressure 60-80 MPa 70-100 MPa 50-70 MPa
Contre-pression 0.3-0.5 MPa 0.3-0.7 MPa 0.2-0.4 MPa

Vitesse d'injection: Medium to fast. Too slow causes cold shuts and short shots. Too fast causes jetting and burn marks. Aim for fill time of 1-3 seconds for most parts.

Pack and Hold:
Nylon has high thermal contraction during cooling (1.5-2.5% linear shrinkage). Insufficient pack pressure results in sink marks and voids. Recommended pack time: 2-5 seconds depending on wall thickness.

Rétrécissement:

Matériau Shrinkage Parallel (%) Shrinkage Perpendicular (%) Anisotropy
PA6 0.8 1.4 0.6%
PA66 1.0 1.7 0.7%
PA12 0.8 1.2 0.4%
PA6-GF30 0.4 1.1 0.7%
PA6-CF30 0.2 0.5 0.3%

GF and CF reinforcement significantly reduce overall shrinkage but increase anisotropy. CF30 has the most balanced shrinkage.

Problèmes courants et solutions

Bubbles and Voids
Causes: Moisture, excessive melt temperature, inadequate pack pressure
Solutions: Verify drying (Karl Fischer <0.15%), reduce melt temp 10°C, increase pack/hold pressure

Silver Streaks / Flow Lines
Causes: Moisture vapor flashing off during injection, contamination
Solutions: Improve drying (dew point < -40°C), purge barrel thoroughly, check for resin contamination

En bref
Causes: Insufficient injection pressure/speed, cold mold, high melt viscosity
Solutions: Increase injection pressure 10-20%, raise mold temperature, raise melt temperature slightly (but not above recommended max)

Marques d'évier
Causes: Insufficient pack/hold pressure or time, thick sections, high local shrinkage
Solutions: Increase pack pressure 20%, extend hold time, reduce wall thickness variation, add ribs with generous radii

Déformation
Causes: Differential shrinkage from orientation, temperature gradients, uneven cooling
Solutions: Increase mold temperature, use balanced gating, counter-gate thick parts, anneal after molding

Nettoyage au jet
Causes: Injection speed too fast, cold mold, gate too small
Solutions: Reduce injection speed at start of fill, increase mold temperature, enlarge gate diameter

Flash
Causes: Injection pressure too high, mold wear, insufficient clamp force
Solutions: Reduce injection pressure, check mold for damage, verify clamp force (minimum 3-5 tons/in² projected area)

Cycle Time Optimization

Nylon cycle time is dominated by cooling requirements:

Cooling Time Estimates:

Matériau Cooling Time Factor (sec/mm wall) Notes
PA6 0.8-1.0 Faster than PA66 due to lower mold temp
PA66 1.0-1.3 Higher mold temp = longer cooling
PA12 0.5-0.7 Lowest mold temp requirement
PA66-GF30 1.2-1.6 High mold temp extends cycle

Cooling System Design:
Baffle and bubbler cooling channels are essential for thick-section nylon parts. Design cooling to maintain uniform mold surface temperature within ±5°C. Hot runner systems significantly reduce scrap and improve consistency for PA66.

Cycle Time Reduction Strategies:
1. Reduce wall thickness where possible — thinner walls cool exponentially faster
2. Optimize mold temperature: Use the minimum mold temperature that produces acceptable crystallinity. Even 5°C reduction can save 10-20 seconds/cycle.
3. Increase cooling water flow: Maintain ΔT of 5-8°C across cooling channels
4. Use conformal cooling for complex geometries — 3D-printed steel inserts enable near-net-shape cooling channels
5. Annealing vs. longer cycle: For parts requiring high dimensional stability, 1-hour annealing post-molding may allow shorter cycles vs. achieving crystallinity in-mold

Material Changeover and Purging

Purging Nylon from the Barrel:
When switching from another material to nylon:
1. Purge with PA6 or PA66 at normal processing temperature
2. Use glass-filled purge compounds for heavily contaminated barrels
3. For color changes: purge with natural material, then new color

Purging TO another material from nylon:
Nylon leaves carbonized residue at high temperatures. Best approach:
1. Drop melt temperature to 250°C
2. Purge with polycarbonate or acrylic (good solvents for carbon deposits)
3. Increase temperature and purge with target material
4. Inspect screw and barrel for degradation if nylon was processed at temperatures above recommended max

Shelf Life and Storage:
Nylon resin has limited shelf life when exposed to humidity:
- Sealed packaging: 1+ years if unopened, stored at <30°C - Opened bags: Process within 48-72 hours or re-dry
- Regrind: Can be reused at 10-30% loadings (never 100% regrind — property degradation)
- Moisture-damaged resin: Will produce steam bubbles during molding — always dry before use regardless of apparent dryness

FAQ

When does Injection Molding Nylon: Processing Parameters and Troubleshooting make sense?

Injection Molding Nylon: Processing Parameters and Troubleshooting makes sense when the part volume, material choice, geometry, and repeatability needs justify mold design and tooling investment.

What design factors matter most for Injection Molding Nylon: Processing Parameters and Troubleshooting?

L'épaisseur des parois, les nervures, les bossages, l'angle de dépouille, l'emplacement de l'entrée de matière, le retrait, la ligne de joint et l'éjection sont autant de facteurs qui influent sur la qualité des pièces moulées.

Quelles informations faut-il fournir avant la fabrication d'un moule ?

Le fournisseur doit confirmer le modèle 3D, le matériau, le volume annuel prévu, les exigences en matière d'aspect, les tolérances requises, ainsi que toute exigence relative à l'assemblage ou aux essais fonctionnels.

What is the biggest risk in Injection Molding Nylon: Processing Parameters and Troubleshooting?

Le risque le plus important consiste à valider l'outillage avant d'avoir vérifié de manière exhaustive le comportement du matériau, le retrait, l'écoulement et le fonctionnement de la pièce dans le cadre de l'application réelle.

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