Investigating the technological limits of micro-injection molding in replicating high aspect ratio micro-structured surfaces

CIRP Annals ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 521-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Lucchetta ◽  
M. Sorgato ◽  
S. Carmignato ◽  
E. Savio
Micromachines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Dempsey ◽  
Sean McDonald ◽  
Davide Masato ◽  
Carol Barry

The use of microfeature-enabled devices, such as microfluidic platforms and anti-fouling surfaces, has grown in both potential and application in recent years. Injection molding is an attractive method of manufacturing these devices due to its excellent process throughput and commodity-priced raw materials. Still, the manufacture of micro-structured tooling remains a slow and expensive endeavor. This work investigated the feasibility of utilizing additive manufacturing, specifically a Digital Light Processing (DLP)-based inverted stereolithography process, to produce thermoset polymer-based tooling for micro injection molding. Inserts were created with an array of 100-μm wide micro-features, having different heights and thus aspect ratios. These inserts were molded with high flow polypropylene to investigate print process resolution capabilities, channel replication abilities, and insert wear and longevity. Samples were characterized using contact profilometry as well as optical and scanning electron microscopies. Overall, the inserts exhibited a maximum lifetime of 78 molding cycles and failed by cracking of the entire insert. Damage was observed for the higher aspect ratio features but not the lower aspect ratio features. The effect of the tool material on mold temperature distribution was modeled to analyze the impact of processing and mold design.


2013 ◽  
Vol 716 ◽  
pp. 430-433
Author(s):  
Won Sik Lee ◽  
Jin Man Jang ◽  
Berm Ha Cha ◽  
Se Hyun Ko

In this work, micro rod arrays of 50 um and 200 um in diameter, respectively, were fabricated by 316L metal injection molding. Acryl sacrificial mold was used for the 50 um rod array. Aspect ratios were about 8 and 6 in 50 um and 200 um rod arrays, respectively and the bending of the rods occured due to high aspect ratio in debinding and sintering steps. Also, severe grain growth occurred at rod surface by sintering for 3 hrs at 1300°C and the average size was measured to be about 70 um.


2006 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 824-831 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nan Shing Ong ◽  
Honglin Zhang ◽  
Wai Hoong Woo

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 12
Author(s):  
Ann-Katrin Boinski ◽  
Barnabas Adam ◽  
Arne Vogelsang ◽  
Lars Schönemann ◽  
Oltmann Riemer ◽  
...  

In recent years, the use of highly functional optical elements has made its way into our everyday life. Its applications range from use in utility items such as cell phone cameras up to security elements on banknotes or production goods. For this purpose, the Leibniz Institute for Materials Engineering (IWT) has been developing a cutting process for the fast and cost-effective production of hologram-based diffractive optical elements. In contrast to established non-mechanical manufacturing processes, such as laser lithography or chemical etching, which are able to produce optics in large quantities and with high accuracy, the diamond turning approach is extending these properties by offering several degrees of freedom. This allows for an almost unlimited geometric complexity and a structured area of considerable size (several tenth square millimeters), achieved in a single process step. In order to introduce diffractive security features to the mass market and to actual production goods, a high-performance replication process is required as the consecutive development step. Micro injection molding represents a feasible and promising option here. In particular, diamond machining enables the integration of safety features directly into the mold insert. Not only does this make additional assembly obsolete, but the safety feature can also be placed inconspicuously in the final product. In this paper, the potential of micro-injection molding as a replication process for diffractive structured surfaces will be investigated and demonstrated. Furthermore, the optical functionality after replication will be verified and evaluated.


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