Read Your Material Datasheet to Cut Molding Costs and Defects.
Selecting a resin for injection molding is a multidimensional decision. Flow isn’t only about MFI/MFR; several other properties on the datasheet directly influence cycle time, shrinkage, and warpage.
You can also read: The Impact of Pigments on Plastic Dimensional Stability.
The rheological curves describe how viscosity drops in dependance of both temperature and shear rate. A larger drop within higher shear rates demonstrates that larger injection speed will reduce the resistance to flow. Courtesy of Campus Plastics.
The coefficient of linear thermal expansion measures how the part’s dimensions change with temperature. Selecting a material with a lower coefficient will lead to lower shrinkage. Courtesy of Specialchem.
MFI/MFR (reporting temperature & load) and rheology/viscosity curves at molding temps.
Shear sensitivity indicator (e.g., power-law index n).
HDT (note the load: 0.455 or 1.82 MPa), plus Vicat/Tg when listed.
Tensile/Flexural modulus (rigidity baseline).
Mold shrinkage (flow vs. cross-flow) and CLTE (directional if filled).
For filled/engineering resins: filler type/content, drying requirements (e.g., PA), and any annealing or conditioning notes that affect dimensions.
Bottom line: Don’t stop at MFI. Pair rheology (for flow and cycle time) with thermal stiffness (for earlier ejection) and dimensional data (shrinkage/CLTE, anisotropy) to minimize pressure, cooling time, scrap, and rework—and to keep shrinkage and warpage in check.
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