What Is Plastic Extrusion: A Definitive Process Guide

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What Is Plastic Extrusion

Plastics are everywhere because of their versatility, longevity, and simpler manufacturing requirements. Plastic extrusion, along with injection molding, is one of the most common processes for high-volume production. Generally, extrusion is common for continuous profiles that use pipes, tubes, door profiles, and other bulky items.

Industrial applications of plastic extrusion started over a century ago and continued to advance with time. Even today, it is the go-to method for many plastic manufacturing projects because its simple, efficient, and delivers accurate results.

The following text takes a look at the basics of the plastic extrusion process. Its advantages, limitations, types, and finally the common applications across different industries.

An Overview of Plastic Extrusion

Plastic extrusion is a process where granular pieces of plastics go through different components of the extruder to end up in a continuous profile with the help of heat and pressure. To understand the process better, it’s important to first understand the extruder and how it works.

How Does Plastic Extrusion Work?

The plastic extrusion process begins with filling the hopper with smaller plastic pieces that are simpler to process. The feed throat uses gravity to transfer that plastic to the barrel for further processing.

When the material enters the barrel, it starts to be warmed by means of at least three intensity zones, where the temperature intensity increases as you move away from the feed throat.

As the temperature increases, the barrel uses a continuously rotating screw to push the molten plastic towards the next component of the machine. The screw and pressure additionally create heat, so the intensity zones themselves don’t need to be basically as hot as the expected extrusion temperature, thereby saving energy and facilitating the extrusion process.

The liquid plastic leaves the barrel through a screen supported by the breaker plate. This screen eliminates foreign substances from the material and maintains the internal pressure. The material goes through a feed pipe into the uniquely fabricated die, which has the same shape as the extrusion profile you want from the project.

At the point when constrained through the die, the molten material creates the same shape as the die opening, which completes the extrusion process.

When completely through the die, the extrusion profile is cooled in a water shower or by means of a bunch of cooling rolls to ensure that the shape of your thermoplastic extrusion profile becomes permanent.

Plastic Extrusion Through the History

Extrusion has always been a high-volume manufacturing process. It started in Germany when Paul Troester created the first plastic extruder. Since then the fundamentals of the process haven’t changed much.

However, there is a lot of improvement in the process when it comes to its efficiency and material handling capabilities. In the past, extrusion machines could only handle specific types of plastics and had many requirements. With time, this improved, and today, plastic extrusion is more versatile, flexible, and capable of handling different kinds of plastics together.

Another common problem with extruded plastics is the fact that they don’t possess the right mechanical properties and strength. This was a significant problem in the past but new developments in technology improved things. Today, custom plastic extrusion is the go-to process of choice as it delivers the quality, consistency, and functionality you expect from modern industrial applications.

Different Types of Plastic Extrusion Processes

The type of extrusion process you deal with depends on the die shape. While the fundamental process of plastic extrusion remains the same, the different types of processes allow you to efficiently deal with the complexities and intricacies of dealing with different shapes.

Here are the 4 main types of plastic extrusion processes that the industries use today.  

1 – Tubing Extrusion

This process is for long tubes, pipes, and other similar items. Generally, processing hollow equipment becomes more difficult. Despite this, this extrusion process remains the same till you reach the die. At that stage, the process uses positive internal pressure to overcome the higher power requirements of dealing with hollow parts.

2 – Blow Film Extrusion

The blow film extrusion process is quite common as it creates many everyday items like shopping bags and other packaging materials. Once again, the process is just like any other type of extrusion (like the aluminum extrusion process). However, the main difference is in the die stage where the material goes through cooling before leaving the die.

At that stage, the material doesn’t solidify completely. That’s why it later goes through an additional process of expansion through blowing. The process is only limited to thinner plastic films. For thicker sheets, you’ll have to go through some other process.  

3 – Sheet Film Extrusion

This process is very similar to the aforementioned blow film extrusion. However, it’s for workpieces that are too thick for blowing. In that case, the material goes through a pulling and rolling process to get the shape you need.

The rolling process also cools down the plastic and allows it to solidify permanently. Generally, this process allows you to create ice cream boxes, juice cartons, wine boxes, and other thicker plastic packaging easily.  

4 – Over Jacket Extrusion

The next type of extrusion is for insulation wires and other similar applications where you cover something entirely with plastic. The process is simple. You pull the material that needs the coating through the die to give it a plastic cover.

Depending on your requirements and application, you might need adhesion between the plastic and the material as well. In that case, all you need to do is to use pressure tooling. This simple addition applies enough pressure on the material to offer excellent adhesion that lasts for a long time.

Types of Plastic Extruders

If you are thinking of investing in a plastic extruder, you’ll have the option of going with either a single screw or twin-screw extruder. Both devices have the same capability to perform all the processes discussed before. However, the type of extruder can affect your production speed, mixing capability, and overall flexibility of operations.

Here are the details of what each kind of extruder brings to the table.

Single Screw Extruder

As their name suggests, single-screw extruders are simple contraptions with one rotating screw in the barrel. Generally, single-screw extruders are ideal for situations where you need simple profiles like pipes and sheets. While single screw machines work quite well, they are a bit slow, don’t mix well, and may not be the best choice for any complicated shape.  

Twin Screw Extruders

As their names suggest, twin-screw extruders have parallel screws in the barrel. Depending on the application, the twin screws can rotate in the same direction or different ones. Because of their design, twin-screw extruders offer greater stability, exhaust performance, speed, and mixing performance.  

Advantages of Plastic extrusion

Extrusion is a popular high-volume production method that offers the perfect combination of versatility, flexibility, and consistency. Here are some of the main advantages of the extrusion process for plastic.